PEACE PROFILE
Richard Plato Okot
Richard Plato Okot and his family, "The Okot Family of Faith," immigrated
from the Sudan in Africa to Portland, Maine in 1998. Okot soon joined Peace
Action Maine and introduced board members to the Sudanese immigrant
community in Portland, known an ASERELA (Action for Self Reliance).
He began teaching Peace Action Maine members about the crisis in his country
caused by the 20-year civil war and U.S./U.N. economic sanctions that have
claimed between two and three million Sudanese lives, many of them children.
Always searching for peaceful solutions to the crisis in his country, Okot
has appealed to local, national and international communities; The United
Nations; Amnesty International; European Economic Communities; churches;
Media; the U.S. government; the government of the United Kingdom, and other
sympathetic bodies.
"There currently may be cause for hope," says Okot. While still concerned
about the outcomes, Okot says, "The Peace talks in Kenya, the lifting of
U.S./U.N. economic sanctions, and positive changes in U.S./U.N. foreign
policies, are signs that conditions in the Sudan may improve."
Peace Action Maine is grateful to Richard Okot for helping us become more
knowledgeable about the humanitarian crisis in Sudan and for the
opportunities we now have to work with him on an international level to seek
peace in Sudan as well as worldwide.
For more information about ASERELA, please visit its website at:
www.aserela.org For more information about the
Sudan, please visit its website at: www.sudan.net
Back to Peace Talk Index, Spring, 2004