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[RwandaLibre] In DR Congo with Angelina Jolie

Thursday 26 Dec 2013 In DR Congo with Angelina Jolie



Angelina Jolie is a woman who seems to attract superlatives. "The most

beautiful woman in the world", "the most famous woman in the world" –

you name it, someone's googled it.



So there was something more than a little daunting about spending the

best part of a week rubbing shoulders with her.



I'd first met Ms Jolie at the foreign secretary's country residence in

Chevening, Kent, where they'd drawn up plans for a global campaign to

tackle warzone rape. She'd raised the idea of me accompanying the two

of them to the Congo to meet some of the millions of women raped

during conflict. If I'm honest, I wasn't sure if a Hollywood A-lister

with a hectic film and family schedule would be able to find the time.



But Ms Jolie was as good as her word and a few months later I found

myself touching down at Nairobi with her and the ever so slightly

star-struck William Hague.



There were many who thought the trip was a kind of vanity project for

the pair of them. After interviewing both the film star and the

foreign secretary, and watching them at work in the Congo, I'd say

their devotion to an atrocity Mr Hague has likened to slavery is

heartfelt and genuine.



Ms Jolie had sheaves of paper and took copious notes of every

encounter. She asked questions, offered views, and promised to feed

back practical suggestions to the UN.



Converting the foreign secretary



She first resolved to campaign against sexual violence in conflict

while researching her 2011 film, In the Land of Blood and Honey, which

featured gruesome scenes of rape during the Bosnian conflict.



Mr Hague's Bosnian aide Arminka Helic presented the foreign secretary

with a DVD of the film. Having watched it he was immediately converted

to the cause.



Hence the trip to the Congo, where both met rape survivors, women at

constant risk of attack in the refugee camps, and the courageous

surgeon Dr Lusi, whose hospital in Goma admits women so brutally

maimed by Congolese and rebel soldiers it makes him despair of

humanity.



Dedication



I didn't know at the time, as we bumped down volcanic, unmade tracks

for hours on end, that Ms Jolie was recovering from a double

mastectomy. In retrospect that explains why her attendance on the

visit was in some doubt right up to the last minute and why, to my

consternation at the time, there appeared to be a question mark over

her promise to do a Channel 4 News interview, live from Rwanda. After

a gruelling series of operations and back-to-back long-haul flights,

she was no doubt exhausted.



But what surprised me most about Ms Jolie was her determination to

follow through on her support for the campaign. Back from the Congo,

she's attended a conference with Mr Hague in Whitehall and a UN

session on the issue in New York. She's also due to fly to a global

summit hosted by the foreign secretary in London next year.



And while you can be sceptical about the chances of succeeding in

ending what Mr Hague has called "a monstrosity of our age", you can't

help but be impressed by Ms Jolie's dedication.



Follow @cathynewman on Twitter



For more on Angelina Jolie and the other winners, losers and

influencers of 2013, visit the Channel 4 News big fat graphic of the

year



http://blogs.channel4.com/cathy-newman-blog/in-the-congo-with-angelina-jolie/149





--

SIBOMANA Jean Bosco

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