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FRom Reuters - Movies on Yahoo

'King Arthur' Star Enters Rwanda Killing Fields

LONDON (Hollywood Reporter) - Rising young British actor Hugh Dancy, who played Galahad in Disney's "King Arthur," has joined John Hurt in the cast of "Shooting Dogs," a movie set against the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.

Directed by Michael Caton-Jones, the BBC Films project began shooting on location last month in and around Kigali, Rwanda, and plans to use several of the actual locations where the atrocities took place. Producers said Friday that the production would shoot with survivors involved in the cast as extras and within the crew.

Hurt plays Michael, a priest who forges a friendship with Joe (Dancy), a young teacher. Together they have to confront the limits of their courage as they decide whether to stay or leave in the face of the Rwandan tragedy.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter

6 posted on 08/02/2004 9:57:45 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... "The terrorists will be defeated, there can be no other option" - Colin Powell)
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To: NormsRevenge

FRom AP - Middle East on Yahoo

U.N. Begins Aid Airdrops in Sudan's Darfur

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=540&ncid=721&e=9&u=/ap/20040803/ap_on_re_mi_ea/un_sudan_aid

ROME - The United Nations (news - web sites) began airdrops of food into Sudan's conflict-ridden Darfur region, a U.N. agency said Monday, the same day Egypt said it was airlifting medicines and other necessities.

The Rome-based U.N. World Food Program said that it had dropped 22 tons of food supplies to the farming town of Fur Buranga in western Darfur on Sunday using an Antonov-12 plane.

The agency plans to deliver a total of some 1,400 tons of food in a first round of airdrops to help more than 70,000 people displaced by the 17-month conflict. The agency has said it anticipates that the air-supply effort in Darfur will exceed the Berlin airlift of the late 1940s.

Meanwhile, Egypt began airlifting food, medicine and other basics to Darfur.

One Hercules C-130 cargo plane left Cairo and will be followed by four others carrying medicine, tents, vaccines, ambulances and a medical team, Defense Ministry officials said.

They said the supplies were donated by the Egyptian Red Crescent with the help of the ministry.

The World Food Program said it intends to continue airdrops throughout the rainy season, which lasts into September. During that period trucks carrying food get bogged down in mud and take an average of three weeks to reach Darfur from Port Sudan on the Red Sea, the agency said.

Trucks are also at risk from bandits, the agency said.

"Dropping food by air is always an expensive last resort, but for many parts of Darfur we simply have no other option at this time of year," said Ramiro Lopes Da Silva, the agency's country director in Sudan.

The agency appealed for funds, saying it had so far received only $78.5 million of the $195 million to cover its emergency work in Darfur this year.

An estimated 30,000 people have been killed in the 17-month conflict in Darfur. A million people have been forced to flee their homes, and an estimated 2.2 million people are in urgent need of food, medicine and other basics.

International aid organizations have accused the Sudanese government of supporting the Arab militias, known as Janjaweed, in a brutal campaign to drive Sudanese citizens of African origin out of Darfur.




7 posted on 08/02/2004 10:01:48 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... "The terrorists will be defeated, there can be no other option" - Colin Powell)
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