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Humanitarian, Nobel nominee addresses local school - Baroness Cox

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  • Humanitarian, Nobel nominee addresses local school - Baroness Cox

    DetNews.com, MI
    May 9 2008


    Humanitarian, Nobel nominee addresses local school

    Catherine Jun / The Detroit News


    SOUTHFIELD -- Missiles were aimed skyward, but planes carrying food
    and medical supplies landed anyway to aid besieged Armenians at the
    Azerbaijan-Armenian border.

    Though not widely known in the United States, this humanitarian
    campaign during Azerbaijan's attempt to wipe out the Armenian enclave
    of Nagorno-Karabakh in the early 1990s was led by Lady Caroline Cox,
    former Deputy Speaker of Britain's House of Lords and human rights
    advocate.

    Cox, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee, retold the dramatic stories of aid
    and rescue Friday morning to more than 160 middle and high school
    students at A.G.B.U Alex & Marie Manoogian School, an Armenian charter
    school in Southfield.


    Showing photos of survivors and cities reduced to rubble -- the less
    graphic images of the resulting devastation -- Cox said everyone has
    a responsibility to help those who are neglected and oppressed around
    the globe.

    "We can't do everything, but each one of us should say to ourselves:
    we must not do nothing," she said.

    Chief executive of Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust (HART), Cox has
    visited Armenia more than 60 times, as well as the war-torn region of
    Darfur, Sudan.

    At another scheduled speaking engagement at the Meadow Brook Theatre
    Friday evening, Cox will be awarded the 2008 Nightingale Award for
    Excellence by Oakland University officials and honored with a
    reception on the Rochester Hills campus.

    At the Manoogian School, students for their part gave Cox $500 to help
    run a rehabilitation center in Nagorno-Karabakh that serves disabled
    children and is financially supported by HART.

    Abigail Newman, 16, of West Bloomfield, said she was struck by Cox's
    compassion.

    "I t makes me relieved to know that it's not just my school and not
    just my community that's interested in Armenia," said Newman, a junior
    in high school. "It brings such hope for the future."

    http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dl l/article?AID=/20080509/UPDATE/805090437/1361
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