Can you please help by sharing this article? it would be very good if many people read this. The G20 is almost there (our Press Release shall get out in the next few days to media and officials at the G20) .
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“In the future, everybody will be world famous for 15 minutes,” or so said pop culture icon Andy Warhol.

But are world events, revolutions, natural disasters also destined to suffer Warhol's 15 minute fate?

Only a few months ago the world watched as Hosni Mubarak was forced aside, weeks later transfixed by the aftermath of the tsunami that struck Japan, then the execution of Osama bin Laden, followed by the spreading economic meltdown in Europe.

World events move fast. The news media even faster.

And while the media is often forced on to the next story before a crisis is fully resolved, the tragedies that were only yesterday's front page news live on – unwitnessed – as they do in Tibet to this day.

In 2008, the media spotlight shone for a brief moment on the tragedy of Tibet when thousands rose up against their oppressors and hundreds died in the aftermath. By Dermod Travis



G20 needs to tell President Hu to extinguish the flames by bringing freedom to Tibet and China - www
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