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"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." -- Margaret Mead

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BOOKS CHOICE

By Former U.S. President Bill Clinton

A new book from Bill Clinton, is a call to action. Giving is an inspiring look at how each of us can change the world. First, it reveals the extraordinary and innovative efforts now being made by companies and organizations—and by individuals—to solve problems and save lives both “down the street and around the world.” Then it urges us to seek out what each of us, “regardless of income, available time, age, and skills,” can do to help, to give people a chance to live out their dreams.


The World's Artists Rock For Africa! What About You!?

Support Live8 Africa to

MAKE POVERTY HISTORY MAKE PROMISES HAPPEN

Chris Martin & Richard Ashcroft perform at Live 8 Hyde Park London, part of the 2005 concerts calling on the G8 leaders to do more to fight global AIDS and extreme poverty in Africa and the world’s poorest countries.

Madonna at Live 8 London performing.

Bono and Paul McCartney performing at Live8 in London.

Will Smith introduces all the Live 8 concert from Philadelphia shows around the world, London, Berlin, Paris, Ontario, Italy, Johanesbourg, Tokyo, The Black Eyed Peas perform.

Hollywood joins The Campaign For Africa

Bono speaks at ONE concert outreach to sign up supporters to join Africa's Campaign

“Live 8 was, and remains a brilliant moment but what is more important is the brilliant movement of which it was a part. This gives the poorest of the poor real political muscle for the first time.

It is this movement of church people and trade unionists, soccer moms and student activists, that will carry the spirit of Live 8 on.  It is this movement, not rock stars, that will make it untenable in the future to break promises to the most vulnerable people on this planet.

That was always why we put on the concerts.”

- Bono

Coming Up: Orbite Special on Darfur

ORBITE TOP NEWS

Alicia Keys, American R&B and soul singer, songwriter, pianist, record producer, actress, philanthropist, and author.

"To be the voice of the people. To represent real people and real life, real struggles, real pains, real joys, real things that are really there, you know?" (read more)

Alicia Keys was in South Africa to help build a HIV-AIDS clinic South Africa has as many as 6 million people living with HIV/AIDS Organizations and Alicia Keys hope to raise $1 per child, per day for life-saving drugs, with nearly 100 percent of donations going toward treatment Alicia Keys mother is an Irish-Italian and her father is a black Jamaican Alicia Keys has won 9 Grammy Awards, 11 Billboard Music Awards, and 3 American Music Awards.

ORBITE NEWS

PENTAGON PLANS NEW MILITARY COMMAND TO COVER AFRICA, for the first time establishing an independent operations headquarters that will focus on anti terrorist operations and humanitarian aid, according to administration officials...

ORBITE NEWS

American Actor George Clooney

GEORGE CLOONEY LEADS DARFOUR MISSION. Since 2003, about 200,000 people have been killed in an ongoing ethnic conflict in Darfur, a region of western Sudan. Another 2.5 million people have been displaced...

ORBITE NEWS

Bono and Bobby Shriver hope Americans see red. A latest effort with T-shirts, jeans, Motorola phones and Apple iPods to help AIDS victims in Africa leverages our buying power. "Red is the color of emergency," says Bono. "I suppose that's why we chose it. But, Red — Product Red — is a way of making it easy for people in the shopping malls and main streets all over this great country to get AIDS drugs to Africans who can't afford them, you see?"...


ORBITE NEWS

 

President Clinton Makes Up for Lost Time in Battling AIDS. Since he left office more than five years ago at age 54, one of the youngest former presidents ever in the U.S. history, Mr. Clinton has made a lasting mark in a cause that he came to only late in his presidency: fighting the AIDS pandemic across Africa and the world...

ORBITE NEWS

WARREN E. BUFFETT GAVE AWAY HIS FORTUNE: The World's Second Richest Man - Who Now Worth $44 Billion, Has Started Giving Away 85% Of His Wealth Since July - Most Of It To The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The gift of about $37.4 billion to Bill Gates's Charity And Four Others Vaults Him Into The Top Tier Of Charitable Giving...

ORBITE NEWS

Bill Gates and wife Melinda

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is giving $47 million in grants for the control of neglected tropical diseases, now almost forgotten in wealthy nations, that still cause excruciating pain, disfigurement and disability for millions of the world’s poorest people, the recipients announced..

 

MORE TOP STORIES...

ORBITE NEWS Bono: "We have written off’ Africa". Rock star-humanitarian says unless the world acts, history will judge us harshly...

ORBITE NEWS LIVE 8 Rocks, Rolls Its Way Around Globe. 20 Years After Live Aid, Rockers Return to Help Africa...

 


 

Last Updated:
12:30 a.m. EDT

August 27, 2008

 

Darfur: Rape Is A Way of Life For Women And Young Girls   

Tragic Fate: In recent months, western Sudan has witnessed a surge in violence not seen since the early days of the conflict in Darfur. The government and its surrogate, the Arab militias called janjaweed, have laid waste to areas where they claim rebels are in control. As before, the primary victims of the attacks are women and girls - the defenseless civilians who inhabit the region.

"Almost every woman living in aid camps has been raped or become a victim of gender-based violence. Many teenagers, while out running errands such as collecting firewood, are raped multiple times by militiamen. They say the situation has now become so bad that many women are now resigned to rape as a way of life and men are unwilling to accompany them because they fear that they will be killed if they try to defend them"

-- Michael Fryer, police commissioner of U.N.A.M.I.D, the United Nations peacekeeping force deployed to try to tackle the violence, on the women daily rape situation in Darfur.

  

Women and girls as young as the age of 4 face rape on daily basis in Darfur Humanitarian trucks for victims are carjacking every single day by militiamen Up to 51 humanitarian compounds in towns across Darfur were raided by armed men  The U.N. Peacekeeping mission is in the middle of it all - so powerless For the U.N.'s workers, it's a "shut up or leave the country" situation New: The International Criminal Court indicts today Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir for war crimes and crimes against humanity. But at what cost for the Darfurians? 


ZAN ZAM, Displacement Refugees Camp, Sudan (Orbite) — Sudan's Darfur crisis has exploded on many fronts -- violence, hunger, displacement and looting -- but United Nations peacekeepers say the biggest issue now affecting the region is the systematic rape of women and children.

Thousands of women as young as 4-year-old caught in the middle of the struggle between rebel forces and government-backed militias have become victims of rape, they say, with some aid groups claiming that it is being used as a weapon of ethnic cleansing.

"That is one of the biggest issues in Darfur: the rapes, and crimes against women and children," said Michael Fryer, police commissioner of UNAMID, the United Nations peacekeeping force deployed to try to tackle the violence.

Relief workers say they are powerless to stop the attacks and say that if they do speak out, they fear that the Sudanese government will tell them to leave the country.

Humanitarian group Refugees International said in a report last year that rape was "an integral part of the pattern of violence that the government of Sudan is inflicting upon the targeted ethnic groups in Darfur."

Some relief workers say that almost every woman living in aid camps has been raped or become a victim of gender-based violence. Many teenagers, while out running errands such as collecting firewood, are raped multiple times by militiamen, the workers say.

They say the situation has now become so bad that many women are now resigned to rape as a way of life and men are unwilling to accompany them because they fear that they will be killed if they try to defend them.

"She said they removed their scarves and used it to tie them up and were taking turns to rape them. One is 13 years old; the other one is 16 years," Ajayi Funmi of the UNAMID police, who is trying to educate women, said after talking to two girls.

"Abandoned babies are reported, but because of the stigma attached to it, there is no detailed report, because the women don't comeforward," said Dr Naqib Safi of the U.N. Children's' body UNICEF.

Evolution of the conflict. Of the 450,000 deaths some experts estimate have been caused by the conflict, most occurred during the first two years, which produced the iconic images of Darfur: government planes bombing villages and allied militias rampaging on horseback, burning huts, raping women and killing civilians.,, more on Daily Rape of Women and Girls In Darfur in Orbite's newsletter. Sign up to supporte and receive orbite's weekly newsletter

 

 

 

 

 

 

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