• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
Beyonce performs "Single Ladies"  at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards in New York, September 13, 2009.     REUTERS/Gary Hershorn

Pictures of the year: Entertainment

A look at the year's best entertainment photos.   Slideshow 

    Stop sending Darfur camps money: EU rights champion

    BERLIN
    Thu Dec 13, 2007 4:58pm EST

    BERLIN (Reuters) - The European Union must stop feeding Sudan's Darfur refugees in camps which only makes them an easier target for ethnic cleansing, the bloc's top human rights prize winner said.

    Entertainment  |  World

    Two days after he was awarded the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought, Sudanese lawyer Salih Mahmoud Osman said security, not financial aid, was what the region's people wanted most.

    "Survivors are grateful that you are sending money and humanitarian relief," he told a panel discussion organized by the European Parliament in Berlin. "But they don't want to remain any more in the camps. You are keeping them there."

    "Indirectly, you are helping the conspiracy of ethnic cleansing. Please don't feed them any more in the camps: help to protect them (so they can) go back to their homes."

    International experts estimate 200,000 people have been killed and 2.5 million uprooted in violence in Darfur since mostly non-Arabs took up arms in early 2003 accusing Khartoum of neglect. Osman says the number of refugees was much higher.

    Osman, an opposition member of the Sudanese parliament who works for the Sudan Organisation Against Torture, also urged the EU not to provide any money for African Union peacekeepers.

    The United Nations aims to send 26,000 peacekeeping forces to police Sudan's Darfur region, and Osman said all of those not already in place should be drawn from outside Africa.

    "Otherwise, you are just wasting money," he said. "We have had 7,000 African Union forces on the ground for more than three years now. But they never helped the situation there. Atrocities are even increasing and the situation is getting worse."

    (Reporting by Dave Graham; editing by Sami Aboudi)



    More from Reuters

    Photo

    Senate panel approves Bernanke nomination

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate Banking Committee on Thursday approved the nomination of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke for a second term, sending it to the full Senate for a final confirming vote. | Video

    President Barack Obama delivers remarks at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Allentown, Pennsylvania, December 4, 2009. REUTERS/Jim Young
    Analysis:

    Would you give him a B+ too?

    "I told Michelle when we got here that in six months my poll numbers will start crashing," says President Obama. He's not worried -- yet.  Full Article 

    Bernd Debusmann

    Burning borrowed money

    The Pentagon burns through $5 million in borrowed money every hour in Afghanistan and the amount is expected to more than double once additional troops are deployed.   Commentary