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US actress barred from Cambodia genocide museum for Darfur protest

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  • US actress barred from Cambodia genocide museum for Darfur protest

    Agence France Presse
    Jan 20 2008



    US actress barred from Cambodia genocide museum for Darfur protest
    12 hours ago

    PHNOM PENH (AFP) - American actress Mia Farrow was on Sunday forced
    to cancel a ceremony in Phnom Penh highlighting human rights abuses
    in Sudan after authorities barred her access to the city's genocide
    museum.

    Farrow and her group, Dream for Darfur, planned to hold an Olympic
    torch ceremony at Tuol Sleng prison -- a brutal interrogation centre
    under the Khmer Rouge -- as part of a campaign to highlight China's
    links to Sudan.

    But the Cambodian government, which has close ties to Beijing, banned
    the ceremony, calling it "insulting" to the two million victims of
    the Khmer Rouge.

    Cambodian police, some armed with truncheons and tear gas, blocked
    all road access to the museum, and an AFP reporter saw police push
    Farrow's group when they refused to move from the genocide centre.

    The star, joined by seven other activists, instead gave white lotus
    flowers to a policeman, and asked him to lay them in front of the
    museum.

    "This flower honors all those who have perished, and celebrates for
    all those who have survived," Farrow said.

    She told reporters later that the group was "disappointed" they could
    not hold the ceremony, while a Cambodian activist who helped organise
    the event accused China of quashing the movement.

    "As a Cambodian, I am deeply deeply ashamed by the actions of our
    Cambodian authorities," said Theary Seng, head of the Centre for
    Social Development. "For me, it's true that China interfered with our
    mission."

    Farrow's campaign aims to push China to pressure Sudan into ending
    the violence in Darfur, where the United Nations estimates at least
    200,000 people have died in five years of war, famine and disease.

    In the run-up to the Olympics, China -- which is by far the largest
    foreign investor in Sudan and absorbs almost two-thirds of its oil
    output -- has been under mounting pressure to use its clout on
    Khartoum.

    China was the closest ally of the communist Khmer Rouge, under whose
    brutal rule up to two million Cambodians died of starvation, disease
    or execution during the late 1970s.

    Farrow's group has organised an Olympic-style torch relay through
    countries that have suffered genocide and Cambodia was the sixth stop
    after visits to the Sudanese border in Chad, as well as Rwanda,
    Armenia, Germany and Bosnia.
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