America’s leading man might be behind bars.
Actor George Clooney, along with at least four members of Congress, were handcuffed and led away on Friday morning after being arrested during a planned protest outside the Sudanese Embassy in Washington.
{mosads}Clooney, 50, sported a zip-up jacket and jeans as he was joined at the demonstration by an eclectic mix of politicians, leaders and activists, including Rep. James McGovern (D-Mass.), Rep. Jim Moran (D-Va.), Rep. John Olver (D-Mass.), Rep. Al Green (D-Texas), Martin Luther King III and NAACP President Ben Jealous. The star of “The Descendants” even brought along his father, TV anchor Nick Clooney, to protest alongside him.
The men were arrested when they refused repeated efforts by police officers to get them off the Embassy grounds.
At the protest, Clooney demanded the Sudan government stop “randomly killing its own innocent men, women, and children” and discussed the dire need for foreign aid in Sudan.
“Immediately,” Clooney told reporters. “We need humanitarian aid to be allowed into the Sudan before it becomes the worst humanitarian crisis in the world — immediately.”
The lawmakers joined the actor’s efforts.
“We are protesting here today to make sure the government of Sudan knows that the world is watching; that the United States Congress is watching,” McGovern said. “And we will be here again and again and again and again until this government stops using food as a weapon.”
Green called on his fellow congressmen to take a tough stance on the leadership in Sudan.
When asked about his arrest, McGovern said, “I’m proud to be here doing this for this cause, this is important.”
McGovern, along with Olver and other House Democrats introduced a bill last week that would require the Obama Administration to address the humanitarian crisis in Sudan and create a comprehensive strategy to deal with its leaders.
Fresh off a trip from South Sudan’s Nuba Mountains region last week, Clooney has been Washington most of this week to raise awareness about the situation in South Sudan, where people are taking shelter in the mountains after being forced from their homes by aerial raids.
— This story was updated at 1:21 p.m.