Saturday, December 10, 2011

"Bombing Continues in Sudan"

http://kristof.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/17/bombing-continues-in-sudan-creating-a-crisis/#more-10223

Kristof calls attention to the crisis in Sudan that terrorizes Sudanese civilians. After the end of a 22-year war, Sudanese people are exiling from the Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile regions. However, the Sudanese government is preventing any humanitarian aid from reaching these people in an effort to not widely publicize this event. Along with random airstrikes, the government is leaving refugees devoid of bare necessities. Kristof calls for immediate assistance and awareness of this conflict.

He is obviously against this situation and tries to remedy it by calling for action. By explicitly stating his opinion that the "United Nations must prevent this crisis from getting any worse...to avert a long-term humanitarian crisis," Kristof portrays to his audience a sense of urgency and forcefulness. His most effective means of communicating to his audiences is the personal aspect of his piece, more so than his other columns. Early on, Kristof emotionally informs the reader that he "witnessed the misery and suffering" of Sudan. He further personalizes his message by describing the physical contact he had with these refugees, particularly during bombing raids, and ends his piece with sympathetic stories and statistics.

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