1stAngel
  • You can find us at:






  • Username:

    Password:

    Remember me?
    Register | Lost Password Share on Facebook
  • 1stAngel Supports

    10% Of All Proceeds From This Site Go To WSPA

  • Featured Blog

    Add to Technorati Favorites

  • Books With 1stAngel

    1stAngel's First Collection of International Art

    Artistic Expressions edited by Elizabeth Edwards

  • Menu




  • donate_button
  • RSS Feeds

  • Blog Sites

  • « Freud’s sleeping nude ‘paid £20′ | Home | Norway king opens new opera house »

    Rowling demands action in Darfur

    By User Image1stAngel | April 13, 2008

    Harry Potter author JK Rowling has joined fellow children’s writers in calling for greater protection for children living in war-torn Darfur.

    An open letter signed by 14 authors, including best-selling US writer Judy Blume and Michael Morpugo, declares: “It is time to change the narrative.”

    “The world needs to wake up. For too long it has let these children suffer. Our politicians need to act on Darfur.”

    The conflict in Darfur, a region of Sudan, is now in its fifth year.

    More than 200,000 people have died in Darfur since rebels took up arms in 2003, according to the UN. Two million have fled their homes.

    ‘Caught in crossfire’

    Sunday marks Global Day for Darfur, with protesters around the world calling on the international community to take further action to end the crisis.

    “The children of Darfur didn’t ask for this war, but are living their days caught in the crossfire of reverberating bullets,” the open letter continues.

    “They must be allowed to be children again. Despite the daily terror they face, they still have hopes and dreams.

    “The world needs to act now to give the children of Darfur a future.”

    Germany’s Cornelia Funke and RL Stine, the American author of the Goosebumps series, are among the writers taking part. Their plea includes calls for an immediate ceasefire and the full deployment of a UN peacekeeping force.

    Human rights groups estimate that more than a million Sudanese children have been caught up in the bloodshed, displacement and killing in the region.

    Hollywood stars Matt Damon, Thandie Newton and George Clooney are also taking part in Sunday’s global protest.

    “Days like this matter because they keep what is happening in the eyes of the international community,” said Clooney, a UN “messenger of peace”.

    “If we all raise our voices the international community will have to listen and respond.”

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/entertainment/7342740.stm

    Published: 2008/04/11 23:24:32 GMT

    © BBC MMVIII

    Rate this:
    2.5

    Topics: An Artist's Life |

    Comments

    *
    To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
    Click to hear an audio file of the anti-spam word

    Related Posts from the Past:



    Readers who viewed this page, also viewed:

    • N/A