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Bosnia genocide survivors join relay for Darfur

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  • Bosnia genocide survivors join relay for Darfur

    Reuters, UK
    Dec 7 2007


    Bosnia genocide survivors join relay for Darfur

    Fri 7 Dec 2007, 17:30 GMT
    By Daria Sito-Sucic

    SARAJEVO, Dec 7 (Reuters) - Hollywood actress Mia Farrow joined
    families of Bosnian Muslim victims of the 1995 Srebrenica massacre
    and activists at a torch-lighting ceremony on Friday calling on
    Olympic host China to help stop genocide in Darfur.

    Farrow and Hatidza Mehmedovic, who lost her husband and two young
    sons in Srebrenica, lit a torch as a symbol of peace and solidarity
    with the victims of genocide in the African nation.

    "We are passing this torch to call for an end to the ongoing crime of
    genocide in Darfur," Farrow told the crowd in Sarajevo. "We are
    calling upon China to end the suffering in Darfur by forcing Khartoum
    to allow a protection force in Sudan."

    Critics say China's military aid to and oil purchases from Sudan give
    it influence it could use to push Khartoum to halt the violence in
    Darfur, where some 200,000 people have been killed and 2.5 million
    driven from their homes in fighting since rebellion broke out in
    2003.

    The Sarajevo event was part of an Olympic-style torch relay, the
    "Olympic Dream for Darfur" campaign, led by Farrow and launched last
    August at the Chad-Darfur border to press for action by China, which
    hosts the Olympic Games next year.

    The relay has already passed through genocide sites in Darfur,
    Rwanda, Armenia, Bosnia and Germany. Next month the torch will be lit
    in Cambodia and the last destination will be Hong Kong.

    "China is the host of the 2008 Olympic ggames and China is also an
    accomplice in Darfur genocide," Farrow said. "It cannot sponsor the
    Olympic Games at home and underwrite genocide in Darfur."

    People in Sarajevo cried while watching pictures taken by Farrow in
    her seven visits to Darfur, in remote western Sudan.

    Bosnian Serb forces besieged Sarajevo for 43 months during the
    1992-95 Bosnia war.

    The United Nations war crimes tribunal in The Hague considers the
    death of some 11,000 people during the siege as genocide, along with
    the slaughter of 8,000 Bosnian Muslim males by Bosnian Serb forces
    near Srebrenica.

    Bosnian Serb wartime commander Ratko Mladic and his political boss
    Radovan Karadzic, indicted by the court for their role in the
    atrocities, are still on the run.

    Other activists, survivors of genocide in Rwanda and Darfur, said
    they felt they had to react to genocide anywhere in the world. "We
    are trying to link genocide survivors so that they call in one voice
    'Never Again'," said Omer Ismail from Darfur.

    The delegation also visited the cemetery and memorial for the
    Srebrenica victims on Thursday.

    "Instead of waiting for wedding bells and grandchildren, instead of
    building factories for them, we are building the cemetery," said
    Mehmedovic, who found the remains of her husband and one son after 12
    years. "I don't wish it on anyone." (Editing by Ellie Tzortzi and Tim
    Pearce)
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