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Survivors of Armenian genocide urge Chinese pressures on Sudan

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  • Survivors of Armenian genocide urge Chinese pressures on Sudan

    Sudan Tribune, Sudan
    Sept 30 2007


    Survivors of Armenian genocide urge Chinese pressures on Sudan


    Sunday 30 September 2007 06:49.

    September 25, 2007 (YEREVAN, Armenia) - Survivors of Armenian
    genocide urged Chinese government to pressurize Sudan to ensure
    security for Darfur people and to end the four years conflict before
    August, 2008, date of the beginning of Olympic games.

    Less than one year before Beijing Olympic Games begin, the Archbishop
    of Canterbury Rowan Williams, His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of
    All Armenians, and prominent human rights activists pointedly
    connected the government of China to the first genocide of the 21st
    century in a torch lighting ceremony at a site commemorating the
    first genocide of the 20th century.

    Archbishop Williams stated, `Today, we honored victims and survivors
    of genocides of the past century, linking them together through our
    passing of a torch signifying the hope that we share for an end to
    the violence in Darfur. I join these survivors in standing up to say
    that although the international community has stood by silently again
    and again while the blood of innocent human beings is shed, we must
    now make the phrase `never again' a reality.'

    `Following many years of indifference, the Chinese government is now
    asserting that it has been a leader for peace in Darfur. But even in
    the best of scenarios, there will not be an adequate peacekeeping
    force on the ground for many months,' said Jill Savitt, Director of
    Dream for Darfur. `We must continue pressing China so that the next
    Olympic Games, an international symbol of peace and brotherhood, are
    not hosted by a nation that is complicit in the ultimate
    international crime.'

    The Archbishop of Canterbury, along with Darfur advocates and
    Armenian genocide survivors, lit the torch at the eternal flame at
    the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan. The torch was then passed
    around the eternal flame in a somber ceremony honoring survivors of
    genocide and remembering the lives lost both in Darfur, and in
    previous genocides of the 20th century.

    `This flame honors those who have been lost and those who suffer;
    this flame celebrates the courage of those who have survived; this
    flame represents the hope we all share for an end to the violence and
    a safe return home,' said Omer Ismail, a Sudanese survivor from
    Darfur, as he passed the torch.

    "Armenians worldwide understand the realities and pain of genocide,
    even today, 92 years after the Armenian Genocide. Today's event
    demonstrates our solidarity with the people of Darfur, and with all
    those who have been subjected to genocide," said Arpi Vartanian,
    Armenian Assembly of America Country Director for Armenia and Nagorno
    Karabakh.

    The Dream for Darfur symbolic Olympic Torch Relay began on the border
    of strife-ridden Darfur and Chad in August, where Mia Farrow and
    other Darfur advocates lit the torch. The Relay then traveled to
    Kigali, Rwanda, where survivors of the Rwandan genocide passed the
    torch from the site where thousands of Tutsis were killed after UN
    forces withdrew.

    After Armenia, the Torch Relay will continue to other countries
    associated with genocide and mass slaughter - Bosnia, Germany, and
    Cambodia, ending in Hong Kong to commemorate the 70th anniversary of
    the Rape of Nanking, China's own experience with the murder of
    innocents.

    Dream for Darfur, a year-long campaign undertaken with the support of
    a worldwide network of Darfur advocates, is both asking and demanding
    that China, in its role as Olympic host and close partner of Sudan,
    use its unique influence with Khartoum to end the suffering in
    Darfur - before the Games begin in August, 2008. The campaign motto is
    `China, Please: Bring the Olympic Dream to Darfur.'

    In solidarity with the international torch relay, a relay will be
    held in 25 states in the United States between September and December
    to build public pressure on China in regard to its dual roles as
    Olympic host and sponsor of a genocidal regime. More info can be
    found at: www.savedarfur.org/torchrelay. National relays are also
    slated for Canada, Italy, Sierra Leone, the United Kingdom, France,
    Brazil, and South Africa.

    In seeking to enlist China's intensive involvement in resolving the
    Darfur crisis, the Dream for Darfur campaign is contacting the IOC,
    national Olympic committees, and corporate sponsors of the '08
    Olympics.

    `We welcomed China's recent UN vote to allow a peacekeeping force
    into Sudan, but China now must press Sudan to ensure that the words
    on paper translate into action,' said Savitt. `We will continue our
    campaign until China uses its influence with Khartoum and we see
    adequate and verifiable security on the ground in Darfur.'

    Photo: September 25 - At a genocide commemoration ceremony at the
    Armenian Genocide Memorial, religious leaders passed a symbolic
    Olympic Torch to call for an end to the genocide in Darfur. From
    left: Samuel Kobia, General Secretary, World Council of Churches; His
    Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians; the Archbishop of
    Canterbury Rowan Williams, Sept 25, 2007.
    On the net: www.dreamfordarfur.org

    http://www.sudantribune.co m/spip.php?article24003
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