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Jolie in Baghdad to highlight plight of refugees

Acting as U.N. ambassador, actress says better plan needed to help Iraqis

Spc. James Deady / AFP-Getty Images
Angelina Jolie has lunch with U.S. soldiers at the heavily fortified Green Zone in Baghdad on Thursday. Jolie visited Iraq on a humanitarian mission and met top officials to seek help for people displaced by the war.
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  Angelina goes to Iraq
Feb. 7: U.N. Goodwill ambassador Angelina Jolie traveled to Baghdad to ‘help the plight of the Iraqi refugees.’

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updated 3:53 p.m. ET Feb. 7, 2008

BAGHDAD - Note to world leaders: Next time you need instant access to foreign dignitaries and top military brass, forget the usual protocols. Just send in Angelina Jolie.

Hollywood’s globe-trotting leading lady swooped into Baghdad on Thursday to highlight the plight of Iraqi refugees, gaining an audience with Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, the American Embassy said.

On her mission as a U.N. goodwill ambassador, Jolie also met with Iraqi migration officials to stress that there needs to be a coherent plan for the more than 2 million internally displaced Iraqis who are beginning to trickle back to their homes amid a recent lull in violence.

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“There’s lots of goodwill and lots of discussion, but there seems to be just a lot of talk at the moment,” Jolie said in excerpts of an interview aired on CNN.

Jolie mingled with American troops during lunch at a dining facility in the heavily guarded Green Zone, which houses the embassy and Iraqi government offices. She grabbed a red plastic tray at the mess hall, collected her lunch and sat at a long banquet table to eat — her fork tines down, of course — as flashbulbs from soldiers’ digital cameras lit up the wall behind her.

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Image: Actors Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt arrive at the 2008 Spirit Awards.
Actors and activists
Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt (and their growing family) travel the world for worthy causes

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During the CNN interview, Jolie said the fate of Iraq will have an impact on the Middle East for years to come.

“And a big part of what it’s going to affect,” she said, “is how these people are returned and settled into their homes and their community and brought back together and whether they can live together and what their communities look like.”

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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