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If Hollywood graded Obama - The Los Angeles Times

Date: 
Oct 17, 2009
Author: 
Tina Daunt

If Hollywood were to give out grades for how President Obama is doing on issues that matter most to liberal activists here, he would get -- at best -- an incomplete.

"The pace of change has begun to matter to Hollywood," said Joel Flatow,who heads the Recording Industry Assn. of America's West Coast office. And that pace, so far, may not be quick enough on the key issues of Darfur, the environment, stem cell research, gay rights, and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

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Hillary Clinton's Stop in Congo Strikes a Chord in Africa - Los Angeles Times

Date: 
Aug 18, 2009
Author: 
Robyn Dixon

Reporting from Johannesburg, South Africa - For most of her recent African tour, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton sounded much like any visiting foreign official, male or female. Except in Congo.

When Clinton ignored security advice and flew to Goma, in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, her focus on the region's rape crisis resonated with some of the continent's most powerless people: women.

It wasn't just that she was the first top-level American official to go to the epicenter of one of the world's deadliest wars, nor even the U.S. aid money she promised. It was her reaction to victims' stories of rape -- and the hope that she might do something about it.

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Is the Darfur Bloodshed Genocide? Opinions Differ - The Los Angeles Times

Date: 
May 4, 2009
Author: 
Edmund Sanders

Reporting from El Fasher, Sudan -- What if the conflict many call the "first genocide of the 21st century" weren't one at all? 

In the United States, many see the six-year war in Darfur as a bloody campaign by a Sudanese Arab-dominated government against rebellious "African" tribes in western Sudan. Two consecutive American presidents and several activist groups have defined it as genocide.

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Activist Prendergast, Obama Talk About Ending Strife in Darfur - The Los Angeles Times

Date: 
Apr 2, 2009
Author: 
Tina Daunt

 Human rights activist John Prendergast, a foreign policy advisor to the stars, met with President Obama and his new Sudan special envoy, Air Force Gen. J. Scott Gration, this week to discuss the deteriorating situation in Darfur.

Prendergast, who has advised celebs as varied as NBA star Tracy McGrady and actors Don Cheadle and Angelina Jolie, was welcomed to the White House along with Omer Ismail, a senior advisor to Prendergast's Enough project.

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ICC Charges Sudan President With War Crimes - The Los Angeles Times

Date: 
Mar 5, 2009
Author: 
Edmund Sanders
Reporting from Khartoum, Sudan -- In a challenge to one of Africa's most defiant strongmen, the International Criminal Court on Wednesday issued an arrest warrant for Sudan's president on charges of war crimes in Darfur, a quest for justice that immediately complicated relief efforts for hundreds of thousands of people and raised the specter of more violence.
 

A three-judge panel found that President Omar Hassan Ahmed Bashir "intentionally directed attacks against an important part of the civilian population of Darfur, Sudan, murdering, exterminating, raping, torturing and forcibly transferring large numbers of civilians and pillaging their property," ICC spokeswoman Laurence Blairon said.

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Uncertainty as Sudan Awaits President's Arrest - Los Angeles Times

Date: 
Mar 1, 2009
Author: 
Edmund Sanders
Reporting from Khartoum, Sudan -- The billboard in downtown Khartoum delivers a not-so-subtle message to passing cars: "A real Sudanese never stands against a president during his time of need," reads the text, under a picture of a smiling President Omar Hassan Ahmed Bashir.
 

As if anyone in the Sudanese capital needed any reminders, an arrest warrant on genocide charges is expected to be issued against Bashir on Wednesday by the International Criminal Court, in a case that threatens to send the country down a path of uncertainty and instability. 

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Hollywood Takes Notice As Congo's Unrest Grinds On - Los Angeles Times

Date: 
Feb 14, 2009
Author: 
Tina Daunt

Much of the world seems to have written Africa's problems off as insolvable, and nowadays, if you ask a lot of Americans to name an ongoing tragedy, they'd probably point first to the U.S. economy. 

Hollywood's political activists are trying to pitch in on both fronts.
 
Several weeks ago, the glitterati came out to discuss how to get involved in assisting U.S. food banks. Feb. 18, many of the same stars will gather at the House of Blues in West Hollywood to honor the International Medical Corps for its work in the tormented eastern regions of Congo and to draw attention to the local Children Mending Hearts group, which assists the corps.
 
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