Danny
|
조회 3860
| 추천 3
- 2006.06.22
오래간만에 올라온 뉴스(수단이라는 작은 나라에 관한 이야기)입니다.. 잘들의시고~~ 토익준비하시는 분 한테는 좋은 점이 있네요
여기 나오는 여자 앵커는 완전한 미국 발음인거 같고..남자 앵커는 영국식발음 느낌이 많이 나네여..암튼....ㅋㅋ 열심히 들으시고~~
도움되시면 좋겠네여~~ 장마입니다...감기 식중독 미끄럼 주의~!!
25일날 토익 치시는 분은 대박...기원합니다...물론...저도 대박을 기원한답니다~!! 힘들지만^^;;
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(CNN Student News) -- June 21, 2006
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
DEANNA MORAWSKI, CNN STUDENT NEWS ANCHOR: Hi there -- I'm Deanna Morawski, and you've logged on to the summer's third webcast of CNN Student News!
First Up: Crisis in Darfur
MORAWSKI: Today, we're taking you to the North African nation of Sudan. It borders the red sea and other countries you see here. Our focus is on Sudan's Darfur region, where a deadly conflict broke out in 2003, and continues today despite international efforts to stop the violence. A recent peace-deal was supposed to disarm the Janjaweed militia, and give the country's rebels a place in the Sudanese government. But on the ground, things haven't changed much, for refugees of the violence. Daryn Kagan explains the forces dividing the country.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
DARYN KAGAN, CNN REPORTER: It is the greatest humanitarian crisis in the world today. More than 200 thousand people dead according to some estimates. More than 2 million left homeless. The U.S. calls it genocide. The victims are black Sudanese peasants; men, women and children. The attackers: Arab militias known as the Janjaweed. Human Rights Watch accuses Sudan's Arab government of ethnic cleansing.
KAGAN: It began three years ago. The black Africans launched a violent rebellion. They were demanding an official position in government and a share in Sudan's new-found oil wealth. The Arab government responded by arming the Janjaweed and allowing them to systematically kill, rape and burn down entire villages in a scorched-earth campaign.
VICTIM: They set fire to everything, they looted and killed...and these problems continue unabated. Only when peace is fully restored will people be able to settle down in places where they will have their dignity and no longer be exposed to danger.
GEORGE W. BUSH, U.S. PRESIDENT: Our goal in Darfur is this: We want villagers to return safely to their homes and rebuild their lives. That work has begun, and completing it will require greater effort by many nations.
KAGAN: U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has also put the international community on notice.
KOFI ANNAN, U.N. SECRETARY GENERAL: We must do everything in our power to ensure that those who have signed the agreement actually implement it on the ground and that the people of Darfur can survive the next few months. For that they need both protection and sustenance.
KAGAN: Daryn Kagan, CNN.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
MORAWSKI: The United Nations has offered to provide that protection, saying the African Union's current peacekeeping force lacks the resources to end the conflict. But recently, Sudan's president refused to allow U.N. troops into his country. Meantime, international aid groups are struggling to keep up with the worsening refugee crisis. Nic Robertson takes us to one refugee camp, where those affected face a daily battle against violence and starvation.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
NIC ROBERTSON, CNN REPORTER: Fires on the Darfur horizon; it's what we were looking out for as we flew on an aid helicopter into one of the most dangerous towns in Sudan's war torn region. Those fires seemed to be coming from villages. We didn't circle in and take a close look, but it appears to be more villages on fire. This has been the trade mark of the Janjaweed militia.
Later U.N. officials were unable the confirm the source of the blaze. But as we circled above our destination, the sprawling and ever growing Gereida camp; temporary home according to the U.N. of at least 120,000 desperate displaced people. We could see where new arrivals were setting up on the dangerous edge of the camp.
We were following Jan Egeland the New York based U.N. Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief on a rare trip to the region to spotlight the suffering. He flew in by helicopter because in the last few months it's become too dangerous for even the U.N. to drive here. He went immediately to the new arrivals.
JAN EGELAND, U.N. UNDER SECRETARY GENERAL FOR HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS AND EMERGENCY RELIEF: They took every thing...when was this?
ROBERTSON: The women say they'd been forced from their village...Joghana 15 miles away...12 days before an offensive by the Sudanese army and then by the Arab Janjaweed militia; the government's proxy force, according to U.N. officials. They told the humanitarian chief in more than a week they'd received no international aid food handouts. He told them aid would come, but couldn't say when.
EGELAND: At the moment this is the epicenter of this earthquake of misery and brutality. Here people come in the thousands nearly every day now. The aid organizations are totally over whelmed.
ROBERTSON: Away from the crowds gathering around Egeland we spot a group of four women sitting alone trying to find shade under a tree. They too are from Joghana a small town of about 13,000 people.. and take turns telling me what happened. Jadah is holding her three year old son Ahmed. When the attack began she says we all ran. Her five year old son Suliman died she says. On her left, cradling her 13 month old son Abdullah, Sawakil tells me they walked for four days to get to the camp and have had no aid hand outs yet. When asked how many died, Ashar claims 400 to 500. Many of the old burned in their homes she says. By now we've drawn our own crowd curious to know what are doing. They complain about a lack of security in the camp. They say the night before two people were shot dead nearby. But it's not until I ask the four women where their husbands are that the scale of their tragedy sinks in. We chose these four women at random.. all of them their husbands are missing.. and one of them Noor.. people tell us her husband is dead. As Egeland moves on through the camp I ask him why U.N. officials are overwhelmed.
EGELAND: We ask the world for $1.5billion dollars to provide for about two and a half million people.
ROBERTSON: He sounds frustrated.. barely one third of that request for money this year has been met.. and the displaced people just keep coming.. outpacing the U.N.'s plans for how much they need. In the last six months, the U.N. says the population of this camp has more than doubled. In the last month alone, they say another ten thousand or so IDP's, internally displaced people, like these children, have arrived in the camp. But the problem the U.N. says is much bigger. Across the whole of Darfur they say almost four million people are affected by the war. But Egeland's problem isn't just a lack of money: Attacks against aid workers are up, making it much harder, sometimes impossible to get relief supplies to the camp at Gereida, and another 400,000 displaced people elsewhere. And even inside the camps despite African Union peace keepers, the displaced people fear attack.
EGELAND: They ran last night.. just around in the area because they thought they would be re-attacked.
ROBERTSON: So even in these camps they are not safe.
EGELAND: That's the bitter reality.
ROBERTSON: So how safe is this area.
EGELAND: I think this is one of the most unsafe around.
ROBERTSON: He is hopeful the new peace deal signed two days ago between the rebels and the Sudanese government will change all that, but he's not counting on it just yet.
EGELAND: These people were driven out ten.. fifteen days ago.
ROBERTSON: And for most here.. even that cautious optimism seems beyond their grasp. Nic Robertson CNN Gereida Sudan.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
Fast Facts
CARL AZUZ, CNN STUDENT NEWS: One of the main missions of United Nations is finding solutions to international conflicts. As an extension of that mission, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the U.N.'s refugee organization, leads international efforts to protect refugees and resolve refugee problems. UNHCR was created just five years after the UN itself was established. Today, the organization's six thousand strong workforce helps some 19 million refugees around the world. UNHCR has been awarded two Nobel Peace Prizes...in 1954 and 1981.
Goodbye
MORAWSKI: And that wraps up this internet edition of CNN Student News. Please remember to check back with us next week, when we'll have an all-new update ready for you. I'm Deanna Morawski.
여기 나오는 여자 앵커는 완전한 미국 발음인거 같고..남자 앵커는 영국식발음 느낌이 많이 나네여..암튼....ㅋㅋ 열심히 들으시고~~
도움되시면 좋겠네여~~ 장마입니다...감기 식중독 미끄럼 주의~!!
25일날 토익 치시는 분은 대박...기원합니다...물론...저도 대박을 기원한답니다~!! 힘들지만^^;;
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(CNN Student News) -- June 21, 2006
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
DEANNA MORAWSKI, CNN STUDENT NEWS ANCHOR: Hi there -- I'm Deanna Morawski, and you've logged on to the summer's third webcast of CNN Student News!
First Up: Crisis in Darfur
MORAWSKI: Today, we're taking you to the North African nation of Sudan. It borders the red sea and other countries you see here. Our focus is on Sudan's Darfur region, where a deadly conflict broke out in 2003, and continues today despite international efforts to stop the violence. A recent peace-deal was supposed to disarm the Janjaweed militia, and give the country's rebels a place in the Sudanese government. But on the ground, things haven't changed much, for refugees of the violence. Daryn Kagan explains the forces dividing the country.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
DARYN KAGAN, CNN REPORTER: It is the greatest humanitarian crisis in the world today. More than 200 thousand people dead according to some estimates. More than 2 million left homeless. The U.S. calls it genocide. The victims are black Sudanese peasants; men, women and children. The attackers: Arab militias known as the Janjaweed. Human Rights Watch accuses Sudan's Arab government of ethnic cleansing.
KAGAN: It began three years ago. The black Africans launched a violent rebellion. They were demanding an official position in government and a share in Sudan's new-found oil wealth. The Arab government responded by arming the Janjaweed and allowing them to systematically kill, rape and burn down entire villages in a scorched-earth campaign.
VICTIM: They set fire to everything, they looted and killed...and these problems continue unabated. Only when peace is fully restored will people be able to settle down in places where they will have their dignity and no longer be exposed to danger.
GEORGE W. BUSH, U.S. PRESIDENT: Our goal in Darfur is this: We want villagers to return safely to their homes and rebuild their lives. That work has begun, and completing it will require greater effort by many nations.
KAGAN: U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has also put the international community on notice.
KOFI ANNAN, U.N. SECRETARY GENERAL: We must do everything in our power to ensure that those who have signed the agreement actually implement it on the ground and that the people of Darfur can survive the next few months. For that they need both protection and sustenance.
KAGAN: Daryn Kagan, CNN.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
MORAWSKI: The United Nations has offered to provide that protection, saying the African Union's current peacekeeping force lacks the resources to end the conflict. But recently, Sudan's president refused to allow U.N. troops into his country. Meantime, international aid groups are struggling to keep up with the worsening refugee crisis. Nic Robertson takes us to one refugee camp, where those affected face a daily battle against violence and starvation.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
NIC ROBERTSON, CNN REPORTER: Fires on the Darfur horizon; it's what we were looking out for as we flew on an aid helicopter into one of the most dangerous towns in Sudan's war torn region. Those fires seemed to be coming from villages. We didn't circle in and take a close look, but it appears to be more villages on fire. This has been the trade mark of the Janjaweed militia.
Later U.N. officials were unable the confirm the source of the blaze. But as we circled above our destination, the sprawling and ever growing Gereida camp; temporary home according to the U.N. of at least 120,000 desperate displaced people. We could see where new arrivals were setting up on the dangerous edge of the camp.
We were following Jan Egeland the New York based U.N. Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief on a rare trip to the region to spotlight the suffering. He flew in by helicopter because in the last few months it's become too dangerous for even the U.N. to drive here. He went immediately to the new arrivals.
JAN EGELAND, U.N. UNDER SECRETARY GENERAL FOR HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS AND EMERGENCY RELIEF: They took every thing...when was this?
ROBERTSON: The women say they'd been forced from their village...Joghana 15 miles away...12 days before an offensive by the Sudanese army and then by the Arab Janjaweed militia; the government's proxy force, according to U.N. officials. They told the humanitarian chief in more than a week they'd received no international aid food handouts. He told them aid would come, but couldn't say when.
EGELAND: At the moment this is the epicenter of this earthquake of misery and brutality. Here people come in the thousands nearly every day now. The aid organizations are totally over whelmed.
ROBERTSON: Away from the crowds gathering around Egeland we spot a group of four women sitting alone trying to find shade under a tree. They too are from Joghana a small town of about 13,000 people.. and take turns telling me what happened. Jadah is holding her three year old son Ahmed. When the attack began she says we all ran. Her five year old son Suliman died she says. On her left, cradling her 13 month old son Abdullah, Sawakil tells me they walked for four days to get to the camp and have had no aid hand outs yet. When asked how many died, Ashar claims 400 to 500. Many of the old burned in their homes she says. By now we've drawn our own crowd curious to know what are doing. They complain about a lack of security in the camp. They say the night before two people were shot dead nearby. But it's not until I ask the four women where their husbands are that the scale of their tragedy sinks in. We chose these four women at random.. all of them their husbands are missing.. and one of them Noor.. people tell us her husband is dead. As Egeland moves on through the camp I ask him why U.N. officials are overwhelmed.
EGELAND: We ask the world for $1.5billion dollars to provide for about two and a half million people.
ROBERTSON: He sounds frustrated.. barely one third of that request for money this year has been met.. and the displaced people just keep coming.. outpacing the U.N.'s plans for how much they need. In the last six months, the U.N. says the population of this camp has more than doubled. In the last month alone, they say another ten thousand or so IDP's, internally displaced people, like these children, have arrived in the camp. But the problem the U.N. says is much bigger. Across the whole of Darfur they say almost four million people are affected by the war. But Egeland's problem isn't just a lack of money: Attacks against aid workers are up, making it much harder, sometimes impossible to get relief supplies to the camp at Gereida, and another 400,000 displaced people elsewhere. And even inside the camps despite African Union peace keepers, the displaced people fear attack.
EGELAND: They ran last night.. just around in the area because they thought they would be re-attacked.
ROBERTSON: So even in these camps they are not safe.
EGELAND: That's the bitter reality.
ROBERTSON: So how safe is this area.
EGELAND: I think this is one of the most unsafe around.
ROBERTSON: He is hopeful the new peace deal signed two days ago between the rebels and the Sudanese government will change all that, but he's not counting on it just yet.
EGELAND: These people were driven out ten.. fifteen days ago.
ROBERTSON: And for most here.. even that cautious optimism seems beyond their grasp. Nic Robertson CNN Gereida Sudan.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
Fast Facts
CARL AZUZ, CNN STUDENT NEWS: One of the main missions of United Nations is finding solutions to international conflicts. As an extension of that mission, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the U.N.'s refugee organization, leads international efforts to protect refugees and resolve refugee problems. UNHCR was created just five years after the UN itself was established. Today, the organization's six thousand strong workforce helps some 19 million refugees around the world. UNHCR has been awarded two Nobel Peace Prizes...in 1954 and 1981.
Goodbye
MORAWSKI: And that wraps up this internet edition of CNN Student News. Please remember to check back with us next week, when we'll have an all-new update ready for you. I'm Deanna Morawski.
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