Jolie praises India for giving shelter to refugees
"The wonderful thing that I have learned since I have been in India is there are many needs for your own people and yet you have all been so gracious and been so open to many refugees over the years," she said.
Zee News.com: 5 November, 2006
New Delhi: Hollywood heart-throb and goodwill ambassador of UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) Angelina Jolie on Sunday hailed India for giving shelter to displaced people of a number of countries and said she would work with New Delhi in this field.
Jolie, who is in India since last month for shooting of a movie, met Minister of State for External Affairs Anand Sharma and they discussed issues relating to refugees in India for about an hour
After the meeting, she told reporters that India's
gesture of sheltering refugees from various countries, even though it has
needful people of its own, is commendable.
"The wonderful thing that I have learned since I have been in India is
there are many needs for your own people and yet you have all been so gracious
and been so open to many refugees over the years," she said.
"India should be commended for all that is done and I am grateful to the Indian people... We have agreed to work together," Jolie said in presence of Sharma.
She particularly appreciated the fact that refugees from many parts of the
world, with different religions and cultures, were being encouraged to come to India
and their identity maintained.
The recipient of academy award and three Golden Globe Awards was accompanied by
UN officials at her first official engagement in India
since she came here for the shooting of a film on slain Wallstreet Journal
correspondent Daniel Pearl.
Jolie noted that she had met
refugees from Afghanistan
and Myanmar
here yesterday.
Sharma said he had apprised her of the programmes being undertaken by the
government for refugees here.
He said he emphasised the
relevance of Mahatma Gandhi even in the present time.
Her meeting with Sharma came a day after she came to Delhi
and spent some time with Sikh Afghan and Myanmarese refugees here at camps run
by the Khalsa Diwan Welfare Society and UN High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR).
She listened to Sikh children playing religious music at the welfare society run by Afghan refugees of the Sikh faith and interacted with the students among some 9,500 Afghan Sikh refugees under the direct care of UNHCR.