Actor and co-founder of Not On Our Watch George Clooney attends an event at the Council on Foreign Relations October 12, 2010 in Washington, DC. -AFP Photo

WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama met with activist-actor George Clooney at the White House Tuesday to discuss US involvement in Sudan ahead of a critical election early next year in Africa's largest nation. Clooney recently returned from Sudan, and is asking the US and world community to use international pressure and robust diplomacy to prevent violence ahead of the Jan. 9 election. The election is an independence referendum on south Sudan that is likely to split the country in two, and there are fears that the vote could lead to a new outbreak of north-south civil war.

''At a time that is one of the most politicized times ever, this is something that everyone agrees on: if there's some way to get ahead of this and stop it before it happens, we better,'' Clooney said after his meeting with the president.

Obama and Clooney were joined in their meeting by activist John Prendergast, cofounder of the Enough Project, an initiative to end genocide. Prendergast said US involvement in containing violence before the election could be a ''game-changer'' for the Sudanese people.

''It gives a chance to diplomacy,'' Prendergast said. ''It gives a chance to peacemaking that didn't exist three-months ago.''

Obama has made clear that the US has a deep interest in Sudan's future. He met with other world leaders at the United Nations in September to address concerns that preparations for the January vote are lagging, and said the coming months may show whether the Sudanese people ''move forward with peace or slip backward into bloodshed.''

A 2005 peace agreement that ended the bloody 21-year civil war between Sudan's mostly Muslim north and predominantly animist and Christian south set up the a unity government in the capital, Khartoum, as well as an autonomous government in the south.

It called for the 2011 referendum on southern independence. The civil war, in which nearly two million people perished, was one of the bloodiest of the second half of the twentieth century. – AP

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