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Camp Darfur At CSULB

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  • Camp Darfur At CSULB

    CAMP DARFUR AT CSULB
    By Kevin Butler, Staff writer

    Long Beach Press-Telegram, CA
    Dec 12 2006

    Inside mock refugee tents, people learn about conflict in Sudan.

    LONG BEACH - Cal State Long Beach student Tammy Dao was not aware of
    the humanitarian catastrophe occurring in the war-ravaged region of
    Sudan called Darfur.

    While watching a television documentary being shown at a campus event
    Monday, she heard African children - refugees from the three-year-old
    conflict - tell of their parents being killed and their villages
    being burned and bombed.

    "I didn't know this was happening," Dao said. "It's really sad to
    see all the suffering."

    The event, called Camp Darfur, featured several mock refugee tents
    erected on campus by the group CSULB Darfur Action League. Inside the
    tents were pictures, videos and articles designed to raise awareness
    of the brutal conflict in the African nation.

    The tents also featured information about incidents of genocide in
    world history, including the Holocaust, the Armenian genocide and
    the massacres in Cambodia, Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

    The Darfur conflict has pitted ethnic African rebels against Sudan's
    Arab-dominated government and pro-government Arab militias.

    The violence has claimed more than 200,000 lives, according to research
    published in the journal Science.

    Human-rights groups and the U.S. government have said the atrocities
    constitute genocide, although the United Nations has stopped short
    of using that term.

    The event, which ends today, aims to make students "realize that
    genocide is a theme that is recurring throughout history," said Peter
    Sablove, president of the CSULB Darfur Action League. "And the earlier
    we catch it, the earlier we can stop it."

    Sablove and his organization also were asking fellow students to
    support efforts to get assurances from the CSULB Foundation that it
    has not invested in companies doing business with Sudan's government.

    The foundation has no direct investments in any companies doing
    business in Darfur, said Joseph Latter, CSULB associate vice president
    for financial management and the foundation's assistant treasurer.

    "Most of our investments are in mutual funds, and we have no control
    over what companies the funds invest in," Latter said in a statement.

    "We also are sensitive to human-rights concerns as stated in our
    investment policy, and we will continue to monitor these issues as
    they change throughout the world."

    Sablove said he wants to see the university investigate further to
    ensure the foundation has not invested in companies doing business
    with Sudan's government.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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