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Mia Farrow arrives in Cambodia for banned Darfur protest

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  • Mia Farrow arrives in Cambodia for banned Darfur protest

    Agence France Presse
    Jan 19 2008


    Mia Farrow arrives in Cambodia for banned Darfur protest


    PHNOM PENH (AFP) - Actress Mia Farrow has arrived in Cambodia and
    plans to defy a ban on holding a ceremony at a former Khmer Rouge
    prison, as part of her campaign on Darfur, activists said Saturday.

    She arrived in Cambodia with other members of her group on Friday,
    said Theary Seng, head of the Centre for Social Development, a
    Cambodian advocacy agency helping to organise the ceremony.

    Farrow and her group, Dream for Darfur, plan to hold the ceremony on
    Sunday outside the notorious Tuol Sleng prison, which is now a
    genocide museum, despite the government ban, she said.

    "Mia Farrow is now in Cambodia and the rally at Tuol Sleng still
    stands," said Theary Seng.

    "We strongly urge all political parties to join the ceremony," she
    added.

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

    But the government's chief spokesman, Khieu Kanharith, on Friday
    threatened to expel the activists and condemned the event as
    "insulting" to victims of the Khmer Rouge regime which devastated
    Cambodia during the late 1970s.

    "We will not allow this. If this foreign group still insists on doing
    this ceremony, we will cancel their visas and expel them from
    Cambodia," he said.

    Farrow's group has organised an Olympic-style torch relay through
    countries that have suffered genocide to draw attention to China's
    close ties with Sudan, as Beijing prepares to host the Games in
    August.

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

    Cambodia would be the sixth stop for the group's relay, which began
    in Chad near the Sudanese border and continued to Rwanda, Armenia,
    Germany and Bosnia.
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