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MUMBAI:
From ethnic slaughters in Armenia to the Holocaust and systematic
terror and violence in Cambodia, Rwanda, Iraq and Darfur, CNN
Chief International Correspondent Christiane Amanpour reports
on the recurring nightmare of genocide and the largely unknown
struggles of the heroes who witnessed evil - and "screamed
bloody murder" for the international community to stop it.
As
the 60th anniversary of the United Nations' Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide approaches,
a new two-hour documentary, CNN Presents: Scream Bloody Murder
will air on 5 December at 7:an, 3:30 pm, 10:30 pm on 6 December
at 5:30 pm and on 7 December at 7:30 am and at 11:30 am.
Amanpour,
who just celebrated her 25th year at CNN, has reported on most crises and human
events from around the globe, including events in Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Israel,
North Korea, Pakistan, Somalia, Rwanda and the Balkans. She has interviewed world
leaders at the key moments of history as they happened and leverages this direct
experience and depth of knowledge in Scream Bloody Murder. Her first-hand insights
provide context to the key decisions before and during the heinous events that
continue to shock the world.
Raphael
Lemkin, a Polish Jew and lawyer, narrowly escaped the Holocaust,
but his parents and 40 other members of his family perished in
the slaughter. In the 1940s, Lemkin coined the term "genocide"
and lobbied the then-fledgling UN for an international convention
compelling nations to prevent and stop genocide.
CNN Productions VP, senior executive producer Mark Nelson says, "Lemkin hoped
that the international community would ensure that genocide never happened again,
but other crusaders against genocide met the same indifference and resistance
Lemkin encountered. This film is about their stories - and what we can learn from
them."
Just
one generation later, Father François Ponchaud, a Catholic missionary working
in Cambodia, tried to alert the world to the torture and mass executions following
the rise of the brutal Khmer Rouge regime. Ponchaud published articles, a book,
and even spoke before the U.N. to urge action to stop the killing.
"No
one believed us," Ponchaud tells Amanpour in the documentary.
In fewer than four years, the Khmer Rouge's reign of terror claimed
the lives of nearly two million men, women and children - one
fourth of Cambodia's population.
"No
one defends human rights," the priest says in the documentary. "Governments
are cold beasts looking out for their own interests."
Amanpour
also reports on what many consider to be the first genocide of
the 21st century: Darfur. Eric
Reeves, a Smith College professor and one of the founders of the
grassroots activism to end genocide in Darfur says, "There
was no lack of information, there was no lack of understanding,
there was a lack of will to stop genocide - year after year after
year."
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