Angelina Jolie’s ‘Economist’ Article
The Economist has published Angelina Jolie’s article for their annual spin-off issue, The World in 2008. CLICK HERE to read the full article.
In other news, Angelina Jolie’s adoption of daughter Zahara in July 2005 was completely legal, the agency involved said on Thursday.
Tabloids reported earlier this week that relatives of two-year-old Zahara, including a woman who says she is her birth mother, want the child returned to Ethiopia.
“The court in Addis Ababa approved the adoption after studying the document her grandmother wrote … saying her daughter, the mother of Zahara, had died and she was too poor to bring her up,” Tsegaye Berhe, the head of Wide Horizons for Children adoption agency told Reuters.
“The grandmother brought three witnesses to court who testified that Zahara’s mother had died and that her father was unknown … The court also investigated the social status of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt before approving the adoption. [The adoption was] legal and irrevocable. The controversy is media hype by unethical journalists exploiting the poverty of the grandmother.”
In other words, reporters paid the relatives to raise the dispute.
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A year for accountability
Angelina Jolie, goodwill ambassador to the UNHCR, hopes for progress in bringing war criminals to justice
On a recent mission for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, I had the opportunity to visit a refugee camp in Chad just across the border with Sudan. Sitting with a group of refugees, I asked them what they needed. These were people who had seen family members killed, neighbours raped, their villages burned and looted, their entire communities driven from their land. So it was no surprise when people began listing the things that could improve their lives just a little bit. Better tents, said one; better access to medical facilities, said another. But then a teenage boy raised his hand and said, with powerful simplicity, “Nous voulons un procès.” We want a trial.
A trial might seem a distant and abstract notion to a young man for whom the inside of a courtroom is worlds away from the inside of a refugee camp. But his statement showed a recognition of something elemental: that accountability is perhaps the only force powerful enough to break the cycle of violence and retribution that marks so many conflicts.
I believe 2008 can be the year in which we begin seeking true accountability and demanding justice for the victims in Darfur and elsewhere. Through accountability we can begin the process of righting past wrongs, and even change the behaviour of some of the world’s worst criminals.
The international tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda have shown the way in convicting heads of state and generals for genocide and crimes against humanity. The UN-backed special court for Sierra Leone has already sentenced three former leaders of a pro-government militia to jail for war crimes committed during the country’s civil war in the 1990s.
In Cambodia, the joint UN-Cambodian court to try top former Khmer Rouge leaders with war crimes and crimes against humanity has begun calling witnesses. It has taken a long time to get even this far, but a trial is likely in 2008. In The Hague, the International Criminal Court (ICC) has begun trials of two of the Congolese leaders charged with fomenting killings and rapes amid the violence that has raged there for over a decade.
Make no mistake, the existence of these trials alone changes behaviour. Seeing the indictment of Thomas Lubanga and the detention of Germain Katanga by the ICC brought to mind a trip I had taken to Congo five years ago. In the Ituri region, where Mr Katanga’s reign of terror had been most intense, our group attended a meeting of rebel leaders. They had gathered in a field to discuss the prospects for a peace agreement—which were not looking very good. The conversation turned hostile and the situation grew extremely tense. At that point, one of my colleagues asked for the name of one of the rebels, announcing, perhaps a bit recklessly, that he was going to pass it along to the ICC.
It was remarkable: this rebel leader’s whole posture changed from aggression to conciliation. The ICC had been around for only five months. It had tried no one. Yet its very existence was enough to intimidate a man who had been terrorising the population for years.
Ending the cycle of violence
This is not an isolated example. Accountability has the potential to change behaviour, to check aggression by those who are used to acting with impunity. Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the prosecutor of the ICC, has said that even genocide is not a crime of passion; it is a calculated decision. He is right. Common sense tells us that when risks are weighed, decisions are made differently. When crimes against humanity are punished consistently and severely, the killers’ calculus will change.
My hope is that these examples of justice in the name of accountability will be just a few of the many to come. I hope that the Sudanese government will hand over the government minister and the janjaweed militia leader who have been indicted for war crimes by the ICC, and that the teenager I met in Chad will get to see the trial he seeks. I hope that those responsible for the atrocities in Darfur will be held to account, not only for that young man’s sake, but for the world’s.
Only through justice will we achieve peace. And only when there is peace will the world’s nearly 39m displaced persons and refugees be able to return home.
The strong preying upon the weak and the weak, upon achieving strength, extracting retribution: this is the nature of so many of the world’s conflicts. The role of aggressor and victim may alternate over time, the tools of destruction may become more sophisticated, but little else changes.
Despite the horror I have seen in my travels, the hopeful lesson I take is that we can begin to put an end to the cycle of violence and retribution that gives rise to war criminals and sets forth floods of refugees. Let 2008 be the year in which we see the principle of accountability put into action.
Angelina Jolie: The World in 2008 [The Economist]

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2,216 Comments
first
God bless you Angie. Keep doing the good works!
AJ is an inspiration!
OMG how low will these so called journalists go.
I dont know how some people can find anything bad to say about this woman.
Thanks JJ for the new thread. Love her and her family.
Tabloid writers make their living out of catering to Jolie-Pitt haters (”MiniVan majority”) who are so desperate for any bad news for Angie. There are no shortage of resentful and insecure women who take their own misery out on successful, beautiful and talented Angelina. HATERS are the ones who are exploiting the poor grandmother in Africa. Shame on you.
Thank you so much JJ for posting Angelina’s ‘Economist’ article.You are wonderful. Wow Angie all Beauty and Brain. Gotta love her!
Thanks JJ. It’s a great article.
What OutTouch did is discusting. I think your law makers have to something about the tabloids. They should be accountable for their lies. They playing with people, real people, with real lifes, and not fiction characters of their bad made up stories.
God, keep blessing and watching over the Jolie-Pitt family.
ANY TRUE JOLIE / PITTS FAN KNOWS THAT STORY ABOUT Z IS JUST BULL AND VICIOUS. I DID’T BELIEVE IT FOR ONE SECOND AND I AM FROM AFRICA. I KNOW FOR SURE THAT THE NEWS PAPER OR TABS USED THOSE TWO INDIVIDUALS JUST TO WRITE A VERY VICIOUS REPORT ABOUT THIS FAMILY.
JUST LIKE PEOPLE MAG MANY MORE TABS AND NEWS AGENCIES ARE GOING TO START APPOLOGIZING TO THIS FAMILY AND STOP WRITING FALSE AND VICIOUS REPORTS.
GOD BLESS THIS FAMILY.
In Touch magazine SUCKS!!! How low can you sink? B@stards.
However, WAY TO GO ANGIE! WOW! I’m so proud to be your fan, you go, girl!
LIKE ALL CONTROVERSY SURRONDING HER
The controversy is media hype by unethical journalists exploiting the poverty of the grandmother
An article in The Economist is fantastic. Go, Angelina! Please let those vultures at In Touch magazine go unnoticed.
i never believe any of the bull that is written in those tabs. i come here for all my info. if it aint on just jared then it aint worth reading. IMO
where are the kiddies? haven’t seen them in a long time. im starting to miss them.
Thanks for reiterating the adoption facts Jared. I had read them along time ago, but couldn’t refind them.
Great article.
Thanks JJ for the new thread and helping to stop the lies. Hello to all fans!! Haven’t been on in awhile but always support the JP’s! :)
We don’t believe anything from tabloids , particularly when it comes to Brad and Angie.Don’t buy any tabloid magazine anymore.
She has a complete life doesn’t she?
Good article in a good magazine.
I forgot to say thanks, JJ. Most people won’t even know this exists but we all know and it’s on JJ. That’s what counts.
IS THERE NO DECENCY? NOT WITH TABLOIDS THEY’LL DO ANYTHING TO SELL A STORY UNFORTUNATELY PEOPLE KEEP BUYING IT OVER AND OVER AGAIN WITH THE CONTINUE SALES OF THEIR MAGAZINES BOUGHT BY OUR FELLOW CITIZENS. IT WILL ONLY STOP IF WE THE PUBLIC DEMAND IT TO STOP BY NOT PURCHASING THEIR MAGAZINES.
Tabloids always want to sell blood money. Don’t believe everything you read. JUST JAREd is the only true source with regards to AJ and BP, and they don’t trash other celebrities too. AJ and BP are kind and generous people who wants to help and raise unfortunate children. These children who’s been adopted by wealthy people are lucky and very fortunate, I’m sure these children will be thankful and grateful that they are choosen. So shut your nasty big mouth if you don’t have nothing good to say. They will always find or invent something to ruined a good relationship because they don’t have one.
Boycott tabloids
Boycott tabloids
Boycott tabloids
Boycott tabloids
Boycott tabloids
Boycott tabloids
Boycott tabloids
Boycott tabloids
Boycott tabloids
Thanks Jared!!!!!
Hello to all BAMPZS Fans :-)
Angie just keeps on doing what she believes in trying to fight the injustice around the world and try to make a difference while the others worry about her split pants or questioning her LEGAL adoption of Zee. Now who is pathetic and looks like a fool?????
I am so proud of Angie. She’s not only beautiful or talented but extremely intelligent. She’s one in a million.
Thanks JJ for the new thread.
Have a great day ladies.
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