photo by jon nicholson
photo by jon nicholson

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George Clooney

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Drawing upon the voices of cultural leaders to protect and assist the vulnerable, marginalized and displaced.

 

feature stories

last update: july 26th, 2012

Satellite Sentinel Project Confirms Razing of Village in Sudan as Board Member George Clooney Helps Re-Launch High-Tech Documentation of Mass Atrocities

WASHINGTON -- The Satellite Sentinel Project (SSP) has released new satellite imagery confirming the intentional burning of Um Bartumbu village in Sudan’s conflict-torn border region of South Kordofan. SSP’s latest report, which also includes new eyewitness reports and photos embedded with GPS codes, solves the mystery of an undated cell phone video, which appeared to show a unit of Sudanese forces called the Match Battalion razing an unnamed village.

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Sudan Dispatch: Abyei in Flux

AGOK, South Sudan -- “I ran because I saw many militias and SAF,” said Malak Miyen, an elderly Ngok Dinka man. “I survived because of God.” Malak was in Abyei town when Sudan government forces and allied militias violently took over the Abyei territory in May 2011, in response to alleged South Sudan army provocation. For over a year, he has been displaced in a town 37 kilometers south of Abyei town called Agok. This was the second time in his life Malak has been forced to flee from his home. The first time was in 2008, when Abyei town was similarly ravaged by fighting.

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NEWS

last updated december 9th, 2010

december 9th, 2010

Exclusive: Rising Tensions in Abyei

(The following is the second in a regular series of multimedia dispatches from veteran journalist Tim Freccia reporting from southern Sudan.)

 

As South Sudan prepares to vote for independence in early January, those in the long-disputed region of Abyei remain uncertain of their fate. Photojournalist Tim Freccia reports.

 

 

If war breaks out between North and South Sudan, Abyei will be at the center of the conflict. The North-South border regionis becoming tenser by the dayahead of next month’s referendum on southern independence.

 

Follow the link for the second full dispatch from Southern Sudan.

december 2nd, 2010

Exclusive: Southern Sudanese Return Ahead of Referendum

(The following is the first in a regular series of multimedia dispatches from veteran journalist Tim Freccia reporting from southern Sudan.)

 

Tensions are rising along the border between North and South Sudan. Many feel that this oil-rich region could be the front lines of Sudan’s next civil war if an independence vote does not go smoothly.

 

With nearly a month to go before the South votes on independence from the North, thousands of southerners living in the North are flooding back to their southern homelands in convoys of ancient, dilapidated buses. The southerners are returning, they say, out of fear of potential reprisals in the North should the country split into two.

 

Follow the link for the full first dispatch from Southern Sudan, including photos.

october 13th, 2010

Board Members George Clooney and John Prendergast Visit Southern Sudan, Meet with President Obama

Having just returned from Southern Sudan, board members George Clooney and John Prendergast met with President Obama earlier this week to discuss US policy towards Sudan, ahead of the approaching Southern Sudanese independence referendum in January 2011.

 

Read and participate in their call for action on Southern Sudan by clicking on the NOOW Feature at the top of the righthand column of this page.

 

Follow the link for photos documenting their trip.

september 15th, 2010

Sudan rejects US referendum incentives

"A package of incentives offered by Washington to ensure the smooth holding of a referendum on whether south Sudan should secede from the north amounts to interference in Sudan's affairs, a ruling party official said on Wednesday."

september 13th, 2010

South Sudan independence vote at risk

"A referendum on whether oil-rich southern Sudan breaks away to become Africa's newest nation is scheduled to take place in less than four months. But with negotiations between north and south stalled over border demarcation, and preparations for the vote lagging perilously behind, the likelihood of the referendum proceeding as planned appears slim."

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