Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Rebeca Chapa: 'Eye In The Sky' Will Put Horror Only A Click Away

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Rebeca Chapa: 'Eye In The Sky' Will Put Horror Only A Click Away

    REBECA CHAPA: 'EYE IN THE SKY' WILL PUT HORROR ONLY A CLICK AWAY

    San Antonio Express, TX
    June 7 2007

    It looks like some sort of macabre video game, but unfortunately,
    these images are as real as it gets.

    Amnesty International Wednesday launched www.eyesondarfur.org,
    a project dedicated to visually bringing the tragedy of the Darfur
    genocide to people all over the world.

    The site, called a "human rights eye in the sky," shows satellite
    images of 12 villages that have been deemed highly vulnerable to
    attack. The list includes villages such as Kafod, where the non-Arab
    Tunjur people fear an attack is imminent.

    New images will be added every few days, according to site organizers,
    to allow viewers to track destruction over time. Project leaders say
    the images of troop movements, for example, could be used to warn
    potential victims of an oncoming attack.

    Irene Khan, secretary general of Amnesty International, said the
    site will send a message to Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir that
    the world is watching.

    "Our goal is to continue to put pressure on Sudan to allow the
    peacekeepers to deploy and to make a difference in the lives of
    vulnerable civilians on the ground in Darfur," Khan said in a press
    release Wednesday announcing the site launch.

    The site will also allow viewers to send messages to al-Bashir.

    The project follows a similar one by Google Earth, in cooperation
    with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

    Since the brutal civil war began in 2003, more than 200,000 have
    been killed and more than 2.5 million displaced. Rapes, theft and
    abduction are common, according to eyewitness accounts and reports
    from the ground.

    Some of the descriptions - men being forced to watch their wives
    and other female relatives gang-raped, children fleeing villages,
    animals being slaughtered - read like fictionalized social commentary.

    That's why sites like these are so important. They make us see
    something we'd rather not.

    Technology is an equal opportunity tool. It can transport us to
    fantastical worlds and contort the political process into theater. It
    can connect us with like-minded people from distant lands and allow
    us to peer into the very building blocks of life.

    It can also, in the case of the Darfur sites, reveal the raw brutality
    of man's inhumanity.

    In a world that is increasingly ruled by the use of technology for
    personal comfort and convenience (think the soon-to-be-released $600
    iPhone), it's energizing to see it employed in a way that seeks to
    get us out of that very comfort zone. The only downside is knowing
    that for every Darfur that gets intense coverage, there are others
    that we'll never know about.

    I ask myself, must I have immediate access to satellite images of
    faraway tragedy to place myself in the world?

    I think the answer is no. Consider the Armenian genocide in 1915. As
    controversial as it is tragic, the extermination of up to a million
    people is considered one of the first such genocides for its magnitude
    and ferocity.

    There were no real-time images of the starving bodies and worn faces
    beamed across space, only news accounts, photos and the specter of
    something terrible happening across the ocean.

    And yet, an American relief organization donated more than $110
    million to the Armenian cause. The "starving Armenians" became a
    rallying cry in this country. They cared. They did something about
    it. What's our excuse?

    In truth, it's not that information isn't available; it's that we're
    too wrapped up in our own selves to engage with the rest of the world.

    It's only when we're thrust into a global perspective that we begin
    to see what else is out there.

    "Out there" is now just a click away.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X