"They burnt everything I owned. They slaughtered nine people that morning. Without any reason. All the [Lords Resistance Army] wanted was food. It has nothing to do with politics. This is an everyday occurrence.'' Victim in Sudan via SMH Sunday Morning.
Sudan. The African country the world is turning it's ear to over the coming weeks. Shame it has taken us this long to stand up and pay attention.
Why now are we paying attention to the deplorable state of human rights in Sudan, when for decades civil war has been raged upon the South by it's own Government? Perhaps because stars like Emmanuel Jal, Alicia Keys and George Clooney have seen with their own eyes what is happening, and gotten behind the fight for peace. Excuse the oxymoron.
Maybe it is something else. OIL. The South harbours three quarters of Sudans oil. In 1999 crude oil was first exported from Sudan. A turning point for the country. In the 11 years gone by, the government of Sudan has displaced southerners, by force, in an effort to claim the oil and create strong ties with the US, China and the Middle East just to name a few. An exchanged oil with China was developed in which they were supplied 40% of the oil in return for weapons, which are believed to have resulted in the 'ethnic cleansing' genocide of 2 million people in Darfur. And the North supplied weapons to the Lords Resistance Army so they could 'clear the land' in the South for them.
The North will surely not allow the South to break away. The country is preparing for what is fast becoming known as 'the worst war of 2011'. Obama is actively pushing the latest round of efforts and the world is falling obediently behind.
George Clooney reminds the world again, that we have been late to every Genocide. There are no more excuses anymore. We have the knowledge and we have the power. We must do our bit. Pray, act and believe in a peaceful outcome for the South. The native pastoral people of Southern Sudan, the Dinka, are some of the most beautiful people in the world. And no one deserves to be tortured off their land for the greed of man.
Sources
Enough Project
China's Relationship
Sudan Oil and Human Rights
Sydney Morning Herald Article
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
We Want Peace
Lights are covering houses, reindeer antlers are appearing on cars, the shops are full of frantic shoppers.
Fear is the devil's police thereAnd they go down side with him so he cares
.... cause nobody was speaking, that's why I am.
Meanwhile, across in Africa, a continent known for war and poverty, Sudan is on the brink of another genocide. While we enjoy Christmas pudding and play with our new toys, families are flooding to refuge camps to escape the brutalities of war. IDP camps are, swarming with diseases, lacking in sanitisation, and 'protected' by soldier who help themselves to any female that comes across their path.
The last civil war between the North and the South claimed 2 million lives. Emmanuel Jal, a former child-soldier, is calling for the world to Stand Up For Peace. In 24 days a referendum will decide if the South should remain part of Sudan. War is brewing and innocent people will once again be the victims.
Emmanuel describes the evil in his country and people suffering with it.
Fear is the devil's police thereAnd they go down side with him so he cares
.... cause nobody was speaking, that's why I am.
Another genocide is not acceptable in this day and age. We've had Rawanda, we've seen the repercussions of Cambodia. We've turned a blind eye to Darfur. We can't stay quiet any longer.
Visit We Want Peace to find out how we can stand up and take action to.
Monday, December 13, 2010
Anti-Slavery Project
Justice overdue for exploited migrant workers
Frances Simmons and Jennifer Burn
November 23, 2010Comments 7

Home Affairs Minister Brendan O'Conner will lead a roundtable on labour trafficking and has flagged tougher laws. Photo: Rob Homer
In the past decade sensational stories about "sex slaves" have captured the public imagination. Meanwhile, the problem of labour trafficking has been over-shadowed and under-reported.
Today, the third annual Australian government National Roundtable on People Trafficking will bring together key government agencies, anti-trafficking NGOs, unions and industry to talk about a problem we know too little about.
Labour trafficking in Australia is under-reported and, sometimes, unrecognised, according to a report released this month from the Australian Institute of Criminology. The report, by human trafficking expert Fiona David, exposes the gaps in our understanding of labour trafficking and brings into focus the broader picture of the mistreatment of marginalised workers.
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The report shines a spotlight on the story of a young construction worker who was unpaid, beaten and left with brain damage. Then there are the 10 Filipino women who travelled to Australia to work as nurses and found themselves forced to work as cleaners. And the Indian chef found bruised, burnt and crying in the gutter.
Labour trafficking exists on a spectrum of exploitation – from gross underpayment and sexual harassment to trafficking, forced labour and slavery. Only the worst forms of exploitation attract criminal sanctions under Australia's anti-trafficking laws. But the backdrop to criminal exploitation is the more pervasive problem of substandard working conditions for marginalised workers.
Migrant workers from poor countries can be easy prey for traffickers who coerce their victims into slavery, forced labour and debt bondage. Crushing debts, family obligations, threats of deportation, an alien legal system and language barriers can leave migrant workers easy to intimidate and control.
Sometimes labour and sexual exploitation are part of the same abusive relationship. On the northern tip of Queensland, a young Filipino woman worked up to 18 hours a day as unpaid help for a married couple. The day she met her "employers", the husband raped her. After numerous appeals, in February 2010 the husband and wife were jailed for slavery offences, although the wife has since lodged another appeal.
The picture of labour trafficking in Australia is still in soft focus. Solid statistics do not exist. Only a handful of cases have been prosecuted and, as Fiona David acknowledges, there are still "critical gaps in information". Even frontline agencies and services are sometimes unaware that Australia's anti-trafficking laws can apply to the worst cases of labour exploitation.
In the lead-up to the National Roundtable, Home Affairs Minister Brendan O'Connor flagged the prospect of new criminal laws targeting the exploitation of hospitality, construction and farm workers.
Criminal laws are a critical element of any effective anti-trafficking strategy. But prosecutions cannot remedy the harm trafficked people have suffered or change the substandard working conditions in which marginalised workers become vulnerable to abuse.
The core issue is access to justice. In principle, laws that protect workers from abuse and discrimination and criminalise extreme exploitation such as slavery and sexual servitude apply to all workers, regardless of their immigration status.
But for vulnerable migrant workers these laws are literally a foreign language: unknowable and inaccessible. In the shadows of the black economy the law is simple: it's what the boss says it is. The threat of deportation is a powerful silencer; people will suffer beatings, destitution, sickness, and work without pay rather than appeal for help.
The head of the International Labour Organisation's Special Action Program on Forced Labour, Roger Plant, argues that an effective anti-trafficking strategy should address the full spectrum of exploitation. The rationale is simple and empowering. Protecting the workplace rights of vulnerable workers can help change the abusive conditions in which exploitation thrives.
If exploited migrant workers return home or are deported without coming to the attention of the Fair Work Ombudsman or, in the most severe cases, the Australian Federal Police, unscrupulous employers remain free to profiteer, while their victims are left destitute, uninformed about their rights to recover unpaid wages or seek compensation.
The exploitation of migrant workers is an ugly secret. While the Fair Work Ombudsman has had success recovering unpaid wages for overseas workers, the more extreme the exploitation, the harder it is to seek help.
Investment in targeted multilingual services and information is essential, as is allaying the fear of immediate deportation. Special visa arrangements exist for suspected trafficking victims who help police. The status of undocumented workers who complain to the Fair Work Ombudsman is murkier and should be clarified.
The Australian government has made it clear it's keen to do more to tackle labour trafficking. There's plenty to do.
Frances Simmons and Jennifer Burn work at the Anti-Slavery Project at the University of Technology, Sydney, a legal service for people who
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Obama vs. Kony
Last week President Obama became the first world leader to issue a comprehensive strategy to address the LRA’s reign of terror across central Africa. It was a major step forward for efforts to achieve a lasting end to LRA atrocities, which include the murder and abduction of tens of thousands of people over the past two decades.
To read more head here. Information provided the team at Resolve and Invisible Children.
To read more head here. Information provided the team at Resolve and Invisible Children.
Her Adventure
Good friend, fellow traveller and lover of all things Africa, with a new photography blog and stories to go along with her amazing photo's.
http://sarahjaneshoots.tumblr.com/
http://sarahjaneshoots.tumblr.com/
Bleak days and bleaker news. Sometimes we need something sunny to brighten our day. Get creative and smile a little.

via one of my favourite blogs Here Comes The Sun

via one of my favourite blogs Here Comes The Sun
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