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Trip to Darfur shocks, enlightens Lakers forward

By John Nadel, The Associated Press

Posted: 6/16/08 Section: Sports
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This August 2007 photo released by Aid Still Required.org, shows the Los Angeles Lakers' Ira Newble with women at a refugee camp in Chad, near the Darfur border.  Newble, a seldom-used reserve on a Lakers team playing in the NBA basketball finals against the Boston Celtics, has become one of the most outspoken athletes in drawing attention to Darfur.
Media Credit: Mia Farrow, The Associated Press
This August 2007 photo released by Aid Still Required.org, shows the Los Angeles Lakers' Ira Newble with women at a refugee camp in Chad, near the Darfur border. Newble, a seldom-used reserve on a Lakers team playing in the NBA basketball finals against the Boston Celtics, has become one of the most outspoken athletes in drawing attention to Darfur.

LOS ANGELES - The children drew pictures of women with babies being shot in the back by soldiers, of helicopters and planes dropping bombs.

Those pictures and the faces of the children who drew them remain sharp in the mind of Ira Newble, the Los Angeles Lakers forward who visited two refugee camps in Chad last August and heard stories from victims of the deadly conflict in Sudan's Darfur region.

"They watched their family members being shot. They drew what they saw," Newble said. "It was emotional. What helped me keep my emotions under control was the fact that these kids' spirits were still high. I couldn't believe it. Maybe it was because they were excited to see a refreshing face."

Newble, a seldom-used reserve on a Lakers team playing in the NBA finals, has become one of the most outspoken athletes in drawing attention to Darfur. An estimated 400,000 people have been killed and more than 2.5 million displaced in the last five years, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

Newble knew very little before reading a newspaper account in February 2007, while playing for the Cleveland Cavaliers. That was just the beginning for the 33-year-old Detroit native, who learned that China is a major trading partner and a supplier of weapons to the Sudanese government.

That summer he traveled to Africa to witness the devastation himself. Newble said one camp had about 20,000 refugees, the other about 25,000. There were many more camps in Darfur, some with as many as 100,000 refugees.

"The lack of food, water, shelter. I felt horrible and almost powerless," Newble said. "There's so many people, you want to help everybody, but you can't."

He spoke with some of the women and was told horrific tales of being kept for weeks by members of the militia, called the Janjaweed, and being raped every night by 10 to 20 soldiers.

"I was surprised at how strong these women were and able to tell their stories," he said. "They want the world to know what's happened to them."

Government troops and militia units have been battling rebels opposed to a government they say persecutes the non-Arab population. The militia units, believed to be government-funded, have targeted civilians.

Newble has been joined by several NBA players in bringing attention to Darfur, including teammates Kobe Bryant, Derek Fisher, Luke Walton, Trevor Ariza and Andrew Bynum.
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