Stephanie Nyombayire
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Stephanie Nyombayire is a representative for the Genocide Intervention Network and a Rwandan native. As of fall 2006 she is a junior at Swarthmore College in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania.
Stephanie lost dozens of her family members in the Rwandan genocide in 1994, although she herself was not in the country at the time. As a result, she felt particularly attuned to situations of genocide, and in 2004, joined with Mark Hanis and Andrew Sniderman to form the Genocide Intervention Network to advocate for intervention in the Darfur conflict in Sudan.
In 2005, Stephanie was asked to introduce President Bill Clinton at the 2005 Campus Progress National Student Conference on behalf of GI-Net. Highlighting Clinton's apology for the world's inaction during the Rwandan genocide, Nyombayire encouraged the audience to "always follow our words with action."[1]
Also in 2005, Stephanie traveled to Darfurian refugee camps in Chad after she was denied entry to Sudan. Her trip, along with fellow students from Georgetown and Boston University, was documented in the film "Translating Genocide," which premiered on MTV on March 12, 2006.[2]
[edit] External links
- Biography on the Genocide Intervention Network website
- Information from the MTVu website
- Feature on Stephanie and other student activists on Darfur from the Swarthmore College website
- "MTVUniversity Names Swarthmore Freshman 'Sudan Correspondent'," press release from Swarthmore College, 14 March 2005
[edit] News Coverage
- "Telling the stories of Sudan’s horror," Delaware County Times, March 20, 2005
- "Students take action to aid Sudan," The Philadelphia Inquirer, April 11, 2005
- "Rwandan teen, excelling in U.S., now lobbies for Darfur aid," Associated Press, June 14, 2005
- "Learning from the tragedy of the past," The Dallas Morning News, July 2, 2005
- "A student, 16, confronts the unthinkable," The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 14, 2006