Berkeley, Calif. – Human-rights activists are using high- resolution satellites to keep watch over imperiled villages in the Darfur region of Sudan and posting the images online to enlist help preventing violence.
The new Amnesty International website,, was scheduled to launch today in conjunction with a conference at the University of California, Berkeley.
“We’re hoping that by shining a light that we will deter the abuse from ever happening,” said Ariela Blatter, director of the Crisis Prevention and Response Center for Amnesty International USA.
Satellite images have been used before to document destruction in Darfur and elsewhere. But the latest project offers clearer, more up-to-date images, allowing experts to better track developments, Blatter said.
The quality of the pictures is “very, very good,” said Lars Brom ley of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, an international nonprofit group that publishes the journal Science and provided technical assistance for the project.
“We can see cows. We can see vehicles. We can certainly see houses and fences and other structures,” he said.
That’s especially important in an area such as Darfur, which is too dangerous for most people, said Bromley, project director for the AAAS Science and Human Rights Program.
The region has been racked by violence since 2003, when ethnic African rebels and the pro- government janjaweed militia began fighting. More than 200,000 people have been killed and 2.5 million forced to flee their homes.
Sending a ground mission would be next to impossible, “but the satellite image provides you another way to peek over the walls,” Bromley said.
The satellites watching Darfur are the latest effort to use the Internet to monitor hot spots such as crime-ridden streets or rush- hour bottlenecks.



