International > Amnesty Keeps an Eye on Darfur with Satellite Imagesas launched a website showing satellite images of war-ravaged Darfur.

Chadian IDP waiting for medical help from MSF in the Cassir refugee camp on April 9, 2007 in Cassir, Chad. The violence has spread from Sudan to Chad where Arab militias attack villages in Chad as well and more than 120.000 Chadian villagers have fled to |
Amnesty International started posting
satellite images on the Internet of villages in Sudan's
conflict-ravaged Darfur on Wednesday in a bid to pressure
Khartoum to allow U.N. peacekeepers into the region.
The rights group invited people around the world to log on
to www.eyesondarfur.org, which will be updated regularly with
new photographs, and help it monitor 12 vulnerable villages and
put Khartoum on notice that these areas are being watched
closely for signs of any further violence.
It also includes archived images that include some from the
village of Donkey Dereis, which is shown in 2004 with hundreds
of huts, but two years later had 1,171 homes gone and the
landscape overgrown with vegetation.
More than 200,000 people have died and 2 million been
driven from home since the conflict in western Sudan between
ethnic African rebels and the government, backed by the Arab
Janjaweed militia, began in 2003. Khartoum says 9,000 have died
and rejects accusations of genocide.
The U.N. Security Council last year adopted a resolution to
deploy a 23,000-strong "hybrid" U.N.-African Union force. But
Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir called that figure too
high. He has agreed to the deployment of 3,000 U.N. police and
military personnel to aid the A.U. force of about 7,000.
However, the final plan for the hybrid force has not yet
reached Khartoum because of differences between the African
Union and United Nations about control of the operation.
Amnesty said the satellite images could show objects as
small as 2 feet across, which would allow the display of
destroyed huts, massing soldiers or fleeing refugees.
"We expect the Sudanese government to protect these and all
villages throughout Darfur," said Ariela Blatter, director of
Amnesty USA's Crisis Prevention and Response Center, who led
the development of the Eyes on Darfur project. "We expect these
villages to be intact today, tomorrow and well, well into the
future."
2007-06-06
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