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Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Not all bad news from Congo

WWF is fighting to protect Gabon's Minkébé National Park from a proposed iron-mining venture that could disturb this pristine haven for elephants, gorillas and eagles.

Not all bad news from Congo. The WWF reports here on the successs of the Congo Basin Forest Partnership in saving the world’s second biggest rainforest. Some of its accomplishments:

  • 34 protected areas, 61 community based natural resource management areas, and 34 extractive resource zones have been zoned for conservation management, covering 126 million acres (51 million hectares) or more than a third of the Congo Basin forests.
  • More than 11.5 million acres of forest have been certified as sustainably harvested by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).
  • Over 5,000 local men and women have been trained in conservation, land use planning and related conservation capacities.
  • Although logging and forest degradation remain serious problems, the overall rate of deforestation in the Congo Basin is estimated to be a relatively low 0.17% — a third of that of Brazil and a 10th of that of Indonesia.
  • Indicators for the survival of some endangered species are also improving. Despite years of conflict and poaching, the population of mountain gorillas in Virunga, between the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Uganda, is up 17% over a previous census taken 20 years ago.
  • Studies of landscapes and wildlife have improved conservation planning, exemplified by the discovery of 125,000 previously unknown western lowland gorillas in Northern Congo.

U.N. focuses on Congo rape crisis


Weighs pact to aid women


UNITED NATIONS | There will be no end to the ravages imposed on women and girls in eastern Congo until firm laws are put into place and enforced with trained police and honest judges, the U.N. human rights chief says.

Navanethem Pillay will be one step closer to getting her wish after the U.N. Security Council meets Wednesday to pass a resolution focusing the world's attention on one of the most devastating yet unresolved aspects of conflicts around the world - calculated sexual brutality.

With Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton presiding, delegates say, the 15-nation council will unanimously approve a U.S.-sponsored resolution that would create a U.N. envoy to help the victims of such abuse and take steps to prosecute the perpetrators.

While the problem is widespread - reports of large-scale rape accompanied the massacre of dozens of people when soldiers set upon an opposition rally in Guinea this week - nowhere is it more common than in eastern Congo, where militia rule and lawlessness have reigned since the 1994 genocide in neighboring Rwanda.

"You know, I have 8 1/2 years of listening to those stories" of unspeakable crimes against women, said Ms. Pillay, a prominent human rights activist and lawyer who served as a judge on the international tribunal for Rwanda.

Describing the treatment of women and girls in the conflict zone as "almost unbelievable," she told The Washington Times in an interview that Congo "needs laws to end impunity. It is almost as simple as that to start with."

The former South African jurist said her legal training had led her to be skeptical about the kinds of stories she heard from Congo.

"I had no patience for any of these women's stories. I was a lawyer and I felt everybody should just be strong and fight all their problems, until I listened to the women who came to me.

"They said, 'You're a woman lawyer - please help us.' It was other women who got me to understand what it was like.

"Judges say, 'Why didn't you run?' I perfectly understand why they cannot run. They are trapped."

Wednesday's proposal follows on the heels of Resolution 1820, passed last year, which said for the first time that rape and other forms of sexual violence can constitute war crimes.

The latest resolution, which council delegates said should pass without opposition, says there is no way to eliminate violence against women and girls as long as the perpetrators know they are immune and unaccountable.

Although the resolution does not single out countries of concern, many passages are pointed directly at the Democratic Republic of the Congo, a broken country that leads the world in wartime rapes, sexual slavery and other gender-based savagery.

Awareness of the problem has been slowly rising since Mrs. Clinton visited a refugee camp in Goma, a provincial capital in eastern Congo, during an 11-day tour of Africa in August. The Times documented much of the horror earlier this month in a three-part series based on six weeks of reporting in the region.

Rarely at a loss for words, Mrs. Clinton struggled to put her thoughts into writing.

"They live in tents, one next to the other, row after row, some clinging to life, others hanging on to whatever glimmer of hope remains in a region plagued by years of brutality. Many of these people have been robbed of their homes, possessions, families and, worst of all, their dignity," she wrote in a commentary for People.com that was published on the State Department's Web site.

"Women and girls in particular have been victimized on an unimaginable scale, as sexual and gender-based violence has become a tactic of war and has reached epidemic proportions."

Mrs. Clinton has discussed the issue on the sidelines of U.N. General Assembly meetings over the past week, telling one group that the protection of women and children "is the heart of foreign policy."

"When [violence] is part of the cultural fabric of too many societies, when it is an assumption of the way things are supposed to be, then it is absolutely a cause for our action collectively," Mrs. Clinton said.

The Obama administration has included Africa's economic and social problems among its many priorities. Mrs. Clinton and the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan E. Rice have visited eastern Congo. Both said they left feeling shaken by what they saw.

A marathon for peace in Kinshasa

Running for peace in Kinshasa
© Anastasios Kioses/MONUC
“The IOC is convinced, more than ever before, that in this third millennium, sport does have a vital role to play in building a better and more peaceful world as it appeals to the community in general and to young people in particular. Sport can facilitate dialogue between different communities and be a catalyst for mutual understanding in our society. This is because we all know that sport is, in essence, the only language understood by everyone. Sports activities promote interaction, tolerance and the spirit of fair play. And we all know that if our youngsters learn through sport to respect each other, they will be well equipped for their role in contributing to a better society”. This was the message from the IOC President Jacques Rogge, to the organisers and participants at an event held on 26 September in Kinshasa by the United Nations Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC) and the Congolese Olympic Committee, on the occasion of the celebration of International Peace Day. This year, this Day was placed under the message from the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon: “We must disarm! We must have peace.”
Run for peace
This is the second time that the IOC has been associated with such a programme in this country. Just like the 2006 Peace Games, this new sporting event will be the opportunity for the various communities of your country not only to enjoy recreation and peace, but also to develop trust and confidence between the parties. On the programme, a marathon, in which around 300 runners took part, including some 30 Blue Berets, MONUC civil personnel and members of the Congolese National Police and Army. The main objective of this marathon was to show the way followed by the Democratic Republic of Congo towards peace: a refound peace that will start the departure of the MONUC and therefore the management of crises by the Congolese, with the help of the UNCT (United Nations Country Team). All along the route, which led the runners from the station to the cycling stadium in Kinshasa, signs and banners recalled the various steps towards peace and the necessity of disarming, each time with a reference to the following stage. Culture was also present, with musical events and shows by artists, young people’s associations and women’s groups on the theme of peace.
Events throughout the country
Besides this marathon, MONUC set up various activities throughout the country. From north to south, and from east to west, conferences and discussions, official ceremonies, prizegivings, and walks for peace brought together local authorities, leaders of various communities, young people’s associations and representatives of MONUC. Objective: to encourage dialogue towards peace and give a future to young Congolese people today and tomorrow.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

More Icelandic support for Congo rape victims

unicef-icelandThe National Committee for UNICEF in Iceland has received ISK 8 million allocated by Iceland’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs towards emergency relief in the eastern part of The Democratic Republic of Congo. According to Visir.is, the support will fund projects that help children who have experienced sexual violence and also to aid women and girls who have been raped or sexually abused by soldiers in their country.

Right from the beginning of the campaign 10 years ago, sexual violence against women and girls has been used as a military tactic by armed forces. In a formal statement, UNICEF in Iceland said that women and girls have been systematically raped in order to degrade them and break up families and communities. UNICEF estimate that there are more than 100,000 rape victims and that over half of them are children.

The financial support from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs will also help with the development of a refuge for women and girls, which have been raped but cannot go back to their families. In the refuge the women and girls will receive healthcare, education and the opportunity to recover – but above all of this, care and safety.

Democratic Republic of the Congo: The U.N.'s Ultimate Peacekeeping Test

AMC threatens to quit Congo in row over 'rebel links'


The lucrative trade in Congolese tin has become embroiled in a political struggle between a London metals merchant and a campaign group over the tin trade’s failure to prevent warlords in the Democratic Republic of Congo from profiting from tin mining.

AMC, a leading trader on the London Metal Exchange, has suspended purchases of cassiterite (tin ore) from Congo after Global Witness, an advocacy group, accused the trader of buying tin from middlemen who deal with rebel groups.

In response to the criticism, AMC said that Thaisarco, its tin smelting subsidiary in Thailand, which purchases tin ore from Congo, would not enter into further contracts with suppliers unless it had the support of the United Nations and campaign groups for a certification scheme. After a UN report last year on illicit trading by rebel groups in Congo, Thaisarco began to develop a certification scheme with ITRI, the tin industry organisation, aimed at verifying the origin of shipments of tin ore.

Congolese tin mining is a cottage industry. The tin mines in North and South Kivu, remote eastern provinces of Congo, are worked by hundreds of thousands of artisanal miners using picks and shovels. A single container load of ore could be sourced from 10,000 miners.

Militia groups, including the FDLR, which is linked to the Hutu extremists involved in the genocide in Rwanda, continue to profit from the mineral trade in eastern Congo through extortion and coercive taxation. Tiny quantities of ore are sold and consolidated through a daisy chain of négociants, middlemen who sell to a government-licensed comptoir. According to the UN report and Global Witness, one of these merchants — Panju — is dealing in rebel tin.

AMC says that it would rather continue to buy tin from Congo while improving its certification system but that it would not renew its contracts without the support of the UN. According to the World Bank, there are as many as two million artisanal miners in Congo, an industry that is supporting more than 12 million people.

Harold Sher, chief executive of AMC, admitted that the certification system was imperfect but said that the company needed time to develop procedures to go beyond the comptoirs.

“We have led the due diligence,” he said. “No other initiative has been started. Unless the UN endorses [the ITRI certification system], we cannot go back in.”

Giles Robbins, chairman of Thaisarco and a director of AMC, said that a de facto ban was starting to take hold. “Customers are saying we don’t want your tin if it is of DRC [Congolese] origin. What we need to resume trade is the clear and unequivocal support of the UN for the ITRI regime.”

A further risk is that a ban would make the trade even less transparent. Congo accounts for between only 5 and 7 per cent of the world’s tin supply and traders have alternative sources of supply. A fifth of Congo’s tin is bought by Chinese and Indian companies and some of these may be less interested in promoting certification procedures.

“The trade will deflect into less transparent hands,” Mr Sher said.

AMC’s threat to pull out of Congo appears to have surprised Global Witness, which is resuming discussions with the company. A spokesman for Global Witness said that it would rather that AMC continued to buy Congolese tin.

The spokesman added that AMC could do more to verify the source of its ore by having a presence on the ground. “It is common knowledge who is controlling the mines. We don’t believe it is that difficult. We feel they are shirking their responsibilities.”

Helping hands reach for the Congo

By Carmen Cusido

September 28, 2009, 8:51PM

WEST WINDSOR -Sarah Yue, 13, feels a sense of humility knowing she can access drinkable water without having to walk several miles. congo.jpgChildren at Kaboke School in the Democratic Republic of Congo were presented with about 200 books and dictionaries collected by eighth grade students at Community Middle School in Plainsboro last year as part of "Hands Across the Water, " an initiative started by Cheryl Ciaranca, an eighth grade special education teacher at the middle school.

Teens sometimes only think of themselves, the drama that's going on at school, their own school work. But there are kids (in Africa) who worry about day-to-day survival.

Yue said that a youngster's whole perspective changes when he or she realizes that.
Maybe it's not only about me. Maybe there are other people suffering in the world, said Yue, a freshman at West Windsor-Plainsboro High School North, who began communicating with Eugenia, 12, a Congolese student, last December.

Yue has joined many other children in the district who are part of a correspondence program that, over two years, has evolved into an effort to share understanding and even books and computers with less-fortunate African children in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

In her e-mail communications with Eugenia, Yue learned the young girls brother died of AIDS at age 10 and that she had to walk many miles to get drinking water and use a computer at an Internet cafe. Yue also learned that students like Eugenia also take education seriously. She asked me to correct her English when we were e-mailing back and forth, said Yue.

Yue began corresponding with her African pen-pal when she was a Community Middle School student a year ago. The program itself is two years old. A Google search two years ago led Cheryl Ciaranca, a special education eighth grade teacher at the Plainsboro school, to an instructor at Kaboke School, in the Kivu region, at the eastern end of the Congolese nation.

Students from Ciaranca assigned a team of 100 students became pen-pals with African pupils soon after. But what started as an electronic pen-pal venture has become a series of fundraising efforts. Ciaranca has now made Hands Across the Water, the pen-pal initiative, an after-school club, open to sixth, seventh and eighth grade students.

In addition to selling Congolese artwork and note cards illustrated with the African students paintings, the club is planning a benefit concert Nov. 20 at the school featuring three local bands at a cost of $10 per ticket, Ciaranca said. The club plans to raise enough money to buy a laptop or two to ship to students there. The club will also make a presentation at the concert about the situation in the Congo and where the patrons money is going, Ciaranca said, adding that all proceeds are going to CENEDI, a French non-governmental organization that works with the school.

Ex-mayor denies genocide charges

Gregoire Ndahimana
Gregoire Ndahimana's family were to be sent to Rwanda

An ex-mayor has denied charges he took part in the 1994 Rwandan genocide when he appeared at a UN-backed tribunal.

Gregoire Ndahimana is accused of responsibility for the massacre of some 2,000 ethnic Tutsis sheltering in a church which was bulldozed.

He was arrested in August during operations against Rwandan rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The US had offered a $5m (£3.2m) reward for information leading to his arrest, but nobody claimed the money.

Earlier this month Mr Ndahimana was sent from Kinshasa to Arusha, Tanzania, where the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) is based.

His wife and five children will be sent to Rwanda, the AFP news agency reported.

ICTR prosecutors believe that almost the entire 6,000-strong population of the town of Kivumu - where Mr Ndahimana was mayor - was killed during the genocide.

Some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were slaughtered in the 100-day genocide.

After the 1994 killing spree, some of those responsible fled across the border to DR Congo, sparking years of unrest in the region.

Warlords Confront A Cash Flow Crises


Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire)

September 29, 2009: The rebel groups in Eastern Congo are facing a cash crises. Many of these groups keep their gunmen paid and armed via the sale of raw materials. Much like diamonds financed West African rebels for years, various valuable ores have sustained warlords in Eastern Congo. But now the foreign companies that ultimately obtain the illegally exported ores are being pressured to halt those purchases. Without the cash, the Congolese warlords won't be able to maintain a large enough force to resist the army and UN peacekeepers. Even now, some rebel groups are forcibly conscripting teenagers, and forcing the kids to fight for them. These fighters are not as reliable as paid gunmen, and are much more difficult to supervise.

September 27, 2009: A “migrant war” has begun pitting Congo-Brazzaville and Angola against the Democratic Republic of Congo. Over the last several weeks Angola has expelled around 9,000 illegal migrants from the Congo (800 were living in the Angolan enclave of Cabinda). Congo-Brazzaville has also recently expelled Congolese (ie, citizens of the DRC) who were living in its territory illegally. The Congolese government is now retaliating against Angola. It isn't clear how many Angolans have been sent back to Angola. The government indicated it intends to retaliate against Congo-Brazzaville.

September 24, 2009: An ad hoc coalition, the government described as rebel militias operating in eastern Congo (primarily in North Kivu province), announced it was suspending cooperation with the government and would no longer participate in the 2008 ceasefire deal. Arrests of militia leaders for war crimes was cited as a main reason for the political withdrawal. The government dismissed the militia group's statement. However, this is the “flip side” of war crimes prosecutions. In the Congo the UN and the government want to make political deals to end the fighting. The leaders they negotiate with could well be charged with war crimes (and for that matter, so could members of the Congolese government). The militia leaders don't want to disarm, face prosecution, and then a lengthy stay in jail – so why make a political deal? The “ICC problem” (named after the International Criminal Court, which issues war crimes warrants) has certainly played a role in Uganda's peace negotiations with the Lords Resistance Army. The problem has now shown up in the Congo.

September 16. 2009: There has been a new series of militia attacks in northeastern Congo. The attacks have displaced around 100,000 people in Ituri District. The worst attacks appear to have taken place about 70 kilometers south of the town of Bunia. A Congolese Army (FARDC) attack had also created refugees. The army launched a reprisal attack on a village (Gety) after a local militia (FRPI/FPJC, Patriotic Resistance Front in Ituri/Popular Front for Justice in the Congo) had ambushed a Congolese Army unit and killed a soldier. An army statement accused villagers of “collaborating” with the rebels. This looks like the kind of action by the army that leads observers to say it is often as dangerous to Congolese civilians as the rebel militias.

September 14, 2011: The government said that the UN Mission on Congo (MONUC) would be able to withdraw from the Congo in 2011. The statement was greeted with real skepticism by many analysts and Congolese. The government statement indicated that the Congolese Army (FARDC) and the National Congolese Police (PNC) would have to be able to handle security issues. Few people believe these organizations will be capable of handling security in 2011.

Congo suspends army officer for drinking with enemy


KINSHASA (Reuters) - Congo's army has suspended an officer accused of drinking with the enemy ahead of a militia attack that the United Nations said left six soldiers dead, a top army commander said Tuesday.

Local Mai Mai militia fighters attacked an army camp in the town of Nyamilima, near Democratic Republic of Congo's eastern border with Uganda, early Sunday.

The army's head of operations in North Kivu province said Nyamilima's battalion commander, known as Major Leon, was suspended for negligence in the execution of his functions.

"He was drinking in the camp with the Mai Mai that then came and attacked," Colonel Bobo Kakudji told Reuters.

Congo's U.N. peacekeeping mission, known as MONUC, said eight people died in the fighting, including six soldiers, one Mai Mai, and a civilian. According to the army, one government soldier, a civilian woman, and four Mai Mai were killed.

Government forces are battling Rwandan Hutu rebels the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) in U.N.-backed operations in the eastern border provinces of North and South Kivu.

However, the offensive, launched earlier this year, has led to increased tension among government loyalists and the various rebel factions and militias brought into the army under a peace deal intended to help boost its capacity to take on the FDLR.

The army's previous commander at Nyamilima was transferred earlier this month after hundreds of former rebels deserted and went on a looting spree.

Last week, 20 eastern militia groups suspended their participation in the peace deal, accusing the government of failing to honour pledges to grant them command positions in the army.

(Reporting by Joe Bavier; Editing by Daniel Magnowski)

DR Congo denounces NGO activist for preparing rebellion


KINSHASA, Sept. 28 (Xinhua) -- The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) on Monday denounced an activist of the non-governmental organization (NGO) for preparing a rebel movement in the central African country's restive eastern region.

Communication Minister Lambert Mende Omalanga told a press conference in the capital Kinshasa that a rebel movement is preparing in Kisangani in the province of Orientale.

Mende said Firmin Yangambi, who is the owner of an NGO group called "Peace on Earth", was arrested on Sept. 23 by security forces while preparing to transport an arms cargo from Kinshasa to Kisangani, where he intended to begin a rebel movement.

The government spokesman refused to give details on the type and quantity of the seized arms, or the motives for rebellion, but said the arms were bought in Kinshasa.

"The exhibits cannot be exposed to the larger public. Justice will take its course," Mende said, indicating that Yangambi's case had been referred to the highest military court.

The town of Kisangni has witnessed several rebel movements, the latest since the 2002-2003 war.

Fugitive Rwandan ex-mayor goes on trial at UN war crimes court for genocide [2003 poster of fugitives wanted by the International Criminal Tribunal fo

2003 poster of fugitives wanted by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)

28 September 2009 – A former Rwandan mayor, who had been on the run for eight years, went on trial today at a United Nations war crimes tribunal on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity in the 1994 massacres in the small Central African nation.

Grégoire Ndahimana, former mayor of Kivumu and one of the last 13 indicted fugitives until his arrest in the neighbouring Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) last month, pleaded not guilty to all the charges arising from the 1994 genocide, when an estimated 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and Hutu moderates were killed by Hutu militants, mainly by machete, during a period of less than 100 days.

Mr. Ndahimana, 57, a high-level figure in the rebel Forces démocratiques de libération du Rwanda (FDLR) in eastern DRC, was handed over last week to the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) sitting in Arusha, Tanzania, a transfer facilitated by the UN Mission in DRC, known as MONUC.

He was indicted in 2001 and had been on the run since then. He is charged with four counts of genocide, or alternatively complicity in genocide; conspiracy to commit genocide; and crimes against humanity for extermination.

He is alleged to have been responsible for killing or causing serious bodily or mental harm to Tutsis in Kivumu, and to have planned the massacres of mostly ethnic Tutsis who sought refuge at Nyange Parish, in conjunctions with Father Athanase Seromba, already sentenced to 15 years in the first instance and to life imprisonment after dismissal of his appeal, and Fulgence Kayishema, who is still at large.

Mr. Ndahimana was arrested on 10 August at Kachuga Camp in North Kivu during a combined operation by the ICTR, MONUC and DRC law enforcement agencies.

Also today, an ICTR Appeals Chamber heard oral arguments in the appeal lodged by Protais Zigiranyirazo and the prosecution against two 20-year and one 15-year concurrent jail sentences for genocide and extermination as a crime against humanity.

Mr. Zigiranyirazo, 71, a brother-in-law of late Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana, alleges that the Trial Chamber committed numerous errors of law and fact, and asked the Appeals Chamber to overturn his convictions or alternatively reduce his sentence, while the prosecution is seeking a life sentence, or alternatively a total effective sentence greater than 20 years of imprisonment.

In all, 81 people have been indicted by the ICTR for serious violations of international humanitarian law committed in the Rwandan genocide.

Central African countries to intensify co-op against global crisis


KINSHASA, Sept. 28 (Xinhua) -- Central African countries are determined to intensify cooperation in diminishing the effects of the global economic crisis, according to the Congolese News Agency (ACP).

Ministers and central bank governors of the Economic Community of Central African States (CEEAC) met over the weekend in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, to hammer out a common strategy against the crisis, ACP reported on Sunday.

At the conclusion of the Sept. 25-26 conference, the second regional meeting hosted by Kinshasa this month after the summit of the Southern African Development Community (SADC), Congolese Minister of Industry vowed a greater role in regional cooperation, especially in the micro-finance sector.

The minister said the CEEAC countries are determined in their resolutions to translate into action the plan to promote regional integration, mobilize internal resources and coordinate regional economies.

The meeting decided to create a CEEAC think tank to enhance the regional cooperation, the minister said, adding participants also discussed transport and energy infrastructure, tariff collections and the reform of the regional financial system.

The CEEAC, established in October 1983, groups Angola, Burundi, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Chad, the Republic of Congo, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Rwanda and Sao Tome and Principe.

Monday, September 28, 2009

DR Congo official says LRA out in four months


www.chinaview.cn 2009-09-28 15:23:02

KINSHASA, Sept. 28 (Xinhua) -- People will no longer talk about the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), the notorious Ugandan rebel group, in a period of four months in Orientale province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), a local official has declared.

Medard Autsai Asenga, the governor of the province plague by years of the LRA attacks, expressed optimism on Sunday in the Congolese capital Kinshasa.

The government forces FARDC have made great headway in the past months, dealing a decisive blow at the LRA, the official said, adding that little by little, the population in the province has gained confidence.

He appealed to the local people to unite for peaceful reconstruction of the war-torn province.

There are at least five projects under construction, including a highway, in the central African country's agricultural hub, according to the official.

The provincial governor made the remarks after the UN mission in the DRC, known as MONUC, expressed fear in its weekly press release that LRA elements continue activities in Orientale province, posing a great threat too the civilian population.


Editor: Fang Yang

At UN, Iran Denounces UAE, Serbia Mocks Albania, Congo War Forgotten

By Matthew Russell Lee

UNITED NATIONS, September 26 -- In the UN's version of Saturday Night Live, at the end of a day of mostly boring speeches, Iran used its "right of reply" to defend its nuclear programs and treatment of protesters, and to denounce the United Arab Emirates for bringing up the issue of three disputed islands.

Then Serbia mocked Albania's statements about progress in Kosovo and the return of Serbian families there. To the contrary, the Serbian representative said, the Serbians in the "province of Kosovo" at the most endangered people in Europe, in what has become a crime haven.

Albania replied that Serbia's rhetoric was "old fashioned," of the type that led to "the worst war since World War Two." One question: ever heard the Democratic Republic of the Congo?

Among the four countries which voted to allow the coup leader of Madagascar to speak were Ecuador and Denmark. Who knew?


UN's Ban and Ahmadinejad

Footnote: Like the Ever-ready bunny, Ban Ki-moon just keeps motoring along. Saturday at six p.m. he and his advisors came out of a meeting with the ASEAN foreign ministers. While there were journalists including Inner City Press huddled against a stakeout barricade, the type of gaggle to which Ban usually at least waves, this time he proceeded without looking over. He will brief the press on Tuesday, then leave on another trip. Monday he's to meet, back to back, withe Prime Minister of Sri Lanka and Myanmar, then Cameroon's Paul Biya. Watch this site.

Children in the Democratic Republic of Congo face multiple crises

Natacha Ikoli, UNICEF

Kahima Bourie (second from left) sits with her children outside the home where they have found shelter in Goma, capital of North Kivu province, DR Congo.| © UNICEF/NYHQ2008-1313/Asselin

© UNICEF/NYHQ2008-1313/Asselin

Kahima Bourie (second from left) sits with her children outside the home where they have found shelter in Goma, capital of North Kivu province, DR Congo. Her family was displaced by conflict from their hometown of Kibumba.

UNICEF Deputy Representative in DR Congo discusses the multiple crises now facing children and families there.

media_real.gif Low | High

NEW YORK (September 25, 2009) – The situation facing children and families in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo was critical enough as they faced increasing conflict and insecurity in recent years, "but at this moment the country is facing three major crises," says UNICEF Deputy Representative in DR Congo Steven Lauwerier.

These crises are taking place simultaneously in northern DR Congo, as well as North Kivu and South Kivu provinces, Mr. Lauwerier noted in a recent interview with UNICEF Television.

In all three areas, he said, various factions are battling for territorial control or political power, and relentlessly recruiting children into armed conflict.

Although the Governments of DR Congo, Rwanda and Uganda undertook joint military operations to defeat the armed groups earlier this year, the groups are still fighting. In fact, said Mr. Lauwerier, they are engaging in an unprecedented level of sexual violence, amongst other methods, to terrorize the population.

Access to the displaced

The Deputy Representative added that significant abuses have been committed against civilians in the conflict zones, forcing many people to flee their homes. An estimated 120,000 people have been newly displaced by the fighting since May – including 75,000 since mid-June.

"In terms of access to the population, it's quite difficult if fighting is still going on," explained Mr. Lauwerier. "And of course, we don’t want to bring our aid workers, or organizations we work with, into dangerous areas."

UNICEF and its partners are closely monitoring the situation and will send evaluation teams to assess the needs of the displaced as soon as possible, he said.

A sense of normalcy for children

UNICEF already has emergency programs on the ground in the conflict-affected areas of DR Congo. The agency is currently preparing interventions to address the humanitarian impact of the latest waves of displacement there.

Mr. Lauwerier pointed out that UNICEF DR Congo "provides education, clean water and sanitation, and [has] set up a program to protect children from further violation so that – in one way or another – their lives can be normalized.

"In a displaced persons' camp or a refugee camp, ensuring that there is a space for these children to be children is very important," he said.

With a focus on health, protection, nutrition and education, UNICEF is working closely with key partners to provide urgently needed relief to Congolese children, in particular, in the midst of this complex web of crises.

A lesson in forgiveness


Rose Mapendo
Mapendo International

My name is Rose Mapendo, and I am the Ambassador to Mapendo International. We work to rescue and protect at risk refugees who have fallen through the cracks of humanitarian assistance in Africa.

I am from the Democratic Republic of Congo. When war broke out in 1998, my family and I were arrested and forced into a prison camp because of our Tutsi ethnicity. As my seven children and I huddled together, my husband – their father – was tortured and executed within earshot. Soldiers killed our friends and relatives, while many more died of starvation and disease. Months later, I gave birth to twin boys on the concrete floor of my cell. I used a stick to the cut the umbilical cord, and a piece of my hair to tie it off.

During this time I was so angry at God. I was resentful towards God. I was so angry because they had killed so many of my friends and family. I was so angry because they had raped so many of my friends. I thought I was going to be killed. I decided I did not want to die angry. I forgave my captors. I forgave all the soldiers who were in charge of killing. I named my twins after the camp commanders who were in charge of executing my husband. I did this because I hoped that my children would survive and I wanted to show the commanders that I forgave them and that I was not their enemy. I wanted to show them that I loved them. That moment when I forgave, from my deepest heart, was the moment that I survived.

Rose and her family in Phoenix, Arizona, in 2006.
Rose and her family in Phoenix, Arizona, in 2006.

My story is too long to tell here. There is a story of hardship and horror in every minute of my 16 months in the death camp. But finally my children and I were brought to a safe haven outside of Kinshasa, Congo’s capital city. A U.S. rescue team came to that safe haven and found us there.

That was where I met Sasha Chanoff and Sheikha Ali. They were part of the rescue team. They got me and my family out. They brought us to a refugee camp in Cameroon, and then we finally resettled to the U.S., to Peoria, outside of Phoenix. Then later Sasha founded Mapendo International to rescue other refugees, like me, who were in danger and had no one to help them. He helped my brother Kigabo and his family resettled to the US after we got there. Mapendo has helped many families, that have been separated, to reunite. If you want to help us rescue and reunite refugees, you can text the world ‘rescue’ to 90999 to donate $5.

My brother Kigabo, who is a doctor, is now starting an organization called African Health New Horizons. I am excited about this because there has never been health care in my home and my brother wants to bring health to women and children and others there.

Now, as the Ambassador for Mapendo International, I am a spokesperson for forgotten refugees. Big Mouth Productions is making a documentary movie about my story. Now God has given me the opportunity to tell my story, and to speak for refugees who have no hope and no one there for them. I am alive to tell you that no matter how terrible life is, no matter how deep your despair or fear, don’t give up. Love people. Forgive people. We all need to live together in this world. My name, Mapendo, means “great love” in Swahili.

Thank you.

Editor’s Note: Rose Mapendo is Ambassador for Mapendo International, a non-profit organization that rescues and protects at-risk and forgotten refugees in Africa. Earlier this year, Rose received the “Humanitarian of the Year Award” from the UN Refugee Agency for her work highlighting the plight of refugees in Africa, particularly those from the Democratic Republic of Congo, where Rose was born. Rose will be speaking at Mapendo’s next event in New York City – a cocktail cruise next Wednesday, September 30th, with open bar and live auction. To purchase tickets, go here. Academy Award-winner Susan Sarandon nominated Rose Mapendo as a CNN Hero. Take a look at the video here.

Three countries in pact to save mountain gorillas

· Rwanda, Uganda and Congo agree 10-year plan
· Information on poachers and apes to be shared

A mountain gorilla in Rwanda

A mountain gorilla in Parc Nacional des Volcans, Rwanda. Photograph: Andy Rouse/Corbis

Efforts to protect the critically endangered mountain gorilla received a big boost yesterday when Rwanda, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo agreed to cooperate on a 10-year conservation plan for the animals.

Only 720 mountain gorillas remain in the wild, all of them in the misty hills of central Africa where the three countries' borders meet. In the past 14 months, at least 10 gorillas have been killed in Congo's Virunga park by rebel fighters and people involved in the illegal charcoal trade.

Despite the apes' vulnerability, conflict and mistrust among the countries has previously prevented formal cooperative efforts to stop the poaching and stem human encroachment.

But in a joint statement yesterday, wildlife officials said their park authorities would work together "to ensure the conservation of the mountain gorillas and their Afromontane forest habitat".

Moses Mapesa, head of the Uganda Wildlife Authority, told a news conference in Kampala: "For the first time, the three countries have decided to protect the great apes which are threatened with extinction and insecurity in the region."

More than a decade of human conflict has damaged tourism in eastern Congo, but for Uganda and Rwanda the gorillas are still a prime attraction, with visitors paying £200 or more for a day-permit to visit apes accustomed to the presence of people. But policing the habitat is expensive and dangerous. Most of the human dwellers nearby are extremely poor and rely on poaching, as well as illegal cultivation and wood-cutting, for cash.

The Dutch government is providing £3.1m for the first four years of the project, which aims to protect habitat as well address the dangers facing the animals.

Anecto Kayitare, of the International Gorilla Conservation Programme, which is backing the plan, said the fund could rise to £50m if donors like the EU joined up.

The conservationist Richard Leakey, who runs a wildlife charity in Congo, said: "If this sort of money comes through, this could be the big breakthrough we've all been waiting for. The mountain gorilla is as endangered as any species could be."

A secretariat will harmonise the conservation laws and policies of the countries, and information on the gorillas, as well as poachers, will be shared. The funds will help nearby villagers, giving them alternative sources of income and cooking fuel.

About 340 of the mountain gorillas roam mostly in south-west Uganda, with a further 250 in Rwanda, and 130 in eastern Congo. Rebels still control large parts of the Virunga park, including the gorilla areas, and refuse to allow in ranger patrols.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Embarrassment: A MLC assembly representative arrested in Rwanda is recognized by a Rwandan court


MLA MLC (Opp.), elected in Masisi, North Kivu, Dunia Bakarani was recognized Rwandans and put in custody by a court of Gisenyi. THE DIGITAL PHOTO SOFT.



ONLINE SUBMISSION September 24 | THE INTERNATIONAL SOFT N ° 1010 DATED September 24, 2009.

The MLC could lose by invalidating one of his deputies, Bakarani Dunia, a Tutsi elected Deputy of the territory of Masisi (North Kivu) in the last election. Pursued by a Rwandan bank in a case of embezzlement, arrested, man has invoked his status as a National Deputy r-dcongolais thereby enjoying parliamentary immunity. But a court in the Gisenyi dismissed recognizing as Rwanda. "At least one man having dual nationality. And ordered the prosecution and cons Bakarani put on deposit.

Already three hearings in the trial took place. The third was scheduled Tuesday, September 22. It should focus on procedural matters of custody. At the hearing on September 17 before the court based in Gisenyi, prosecutors said Dunia Bakarani continue to "abuse of trust" and "misappropriation of funds belonging to the Access Bank, a private bank in Rwanda.

Lethal Weapon DUNIA FOR REMOVING THE CLAWS OF HIS JUDGES.
The Dunia Bakarani deputy was arrested September 5 by police Rubavu in Gisenyi. Access Bank is accused of having contracted fraudulently appropriated an amount RwF worth 100,000 U.S. dollars, in complicity with the manager of the bank - a Rwandan - which is also under arrest.

Me Buhuru, the general counsel of Dunia Bakarani, made an exception in evoking the quality of the accused shall enjoy immunity as a MP in office. He demanded his release, pure and simple.

According to Mr. Buhuru his client has the privilege of immunity and that in his capacity as deputy foreign function to be exempt from prosecution on the territory of Rwanda. Response tit for tat. Oscar Badiga, public prosecutor, responded by invoking Article 6 of the Rwandan Penal Code which authorizes the Rwandan courts to prosecute any person (r-dcongolaise or otherwise) who commits a crime on the territory of Rwanda, except the representatives of the diplomatic function or mission in Rwanda.

The prosecution said that in this case, Dunia Bakarani was not an official mission to Rwanda and to the facts alleged against him plus the offense of residing on the territory of Rwanda. Given that the complainant has presented no diplomatic passport or other document of immigration shows that its regular entry on Rwandan soil.

Driven into a corner - and not aggravate the case that his client would have been illegal on the territory of Rwanda without having the necessary paperwork - the lawyer Dunia Bakarani released the weapon to try d ' Dunia Bakarani extract from the clutches of the Rwandan justice: his client would have the double nationality.

Clearly, if the Deputy National MLC Rwanda, it is also a citizen of L-dC. And the lawyer said that the Rwandan Constitution allows dual citizenship. The lawyer has admitted that his client is a citizen of Rwanda since having the Rwandan nationality. Thus, it is not obliged to submit any document to justify his stay in his own country. According to Mr. Buhuru, Dunia Bakarani came to Rwanda as Rwandan citizen and not as citizen-r dcongolais.

THE Rwandan-R-DCONGOLAIS LEAK IN KINSHASA.
Decision of the presiding judge basic Gisenyi, J. Rutaremara Felicien, which postponed s'esr to Article 6 of the Rwandan Penal Code: "The court accepts the status of dual nationality Dunia Bakarani accordance with the Constitution of Rwanda. The court accepts that Dunia is in Rwanda as a citizen of Rwanda, with residence and domicile in Rwanda and not as member Congolese living in Rwanda. And ordered that he be prosecuted as such have committed a crime on the territory of Rwanda. "

For many lawyers, except the privilege of immunity raised by Me Buhuru not justified. Recall that in the case of Access, twenty people, all Rwandan-r-dcongolaises were arrested despite they have repaid the funds received. According to sources close to the floor near the court based in Gisenyi, some personalities involved in this case are in the territory r-dcongolais.

It speaks emphatically the case of the wife of a businessman-r dcongolais affecting Goma in North Kivu. At last report, he had sent to Kinshasa to avoid the prosecution of Rwandan justice. It is in this case policy issues very awkward for the Movement for the Liberation of Congo. How does a political party could he accept her in a stranger, or at least someone with a dual nationality? How had he presented as a candidate in an election that could be part of that L-dCongolais?

The question could equally apply to the Independent Electoral Commission, IEC. She who had organized the operations of recruitment, as the polls?

Joint Wednesday, September 23, the general rapporteur of the CIS, Dieudonne Mirimo said the Soft International "that the conditions, under the Constitution for a person to be enrolled in this is that the officer committed the enlisting one of the following documents: a certificate of citizenship, a passport valid identity card for years MPR-party state, a service card.

TO THE DEFEAT OF MEMBER MLC.
"But the CIS has done better: it has posted lists of recruitment for social control and we do not recall that anyone has denounced anyone in the electoral district of Masisi. Perhaps had they fear ...».

He continued: "We assume that cases Dunia Bakarani are numerous. Parliament to act ...». He recalls how identity cards - the famous green colors of the Mobutu years - were falsified, especially in Kivu.

It is true that the issue of dual nationality parliamentarians r-dcongolais had been much discussed at the beginning of the current Legislature and a moratorium was granted. Since we know more ... The case of Gisenyi stirs up this issue and may lead to the invalidation of MLC MP ... It embarrasses the MLC, to date, acknowledged that one of his deputies was arrested and prosecuted in Rwanda in a matter of law.

NADINE KUTA.
lesoftonline.net 24/09/2009

Vultures over Congo’s Inga Dams

What could be nobler than being on the side of poor Africa women? Hydropower companies like to justify their dam projects – including the Grand Inga and Inga 3 dams on the Congo River – with the plight of poor women who spend hours collecting firewood every day. In reality, the poor are usually the last to benefit from such projects. Large mining companies and greedy vulture funds are already fighting over the spoils of the Inga dams.

The Congo River has the world’s second largest streamflow after the Amazon, which for engineers translates into a huge hydropower potential. The Inga 1 and 2 dams have been the Democratic Republic of Congo’s main source of electricity for the past three decades. The proposed Grand Inga Dam would divert the Congo River and generate electricity at a capacity of 39,000 megawatts – more than twice the capacity of China’s Three Gorges Dam. It comes with a fantastic price tag of $80 billion.

The Inga 3 Project would draw water from the reservoir of Inga 1 and 2 and, at a cost of $8 billion, have a capacity of 3,500 megawatts. The World Bank, the African Development Bank, the EU, BNP Paribas, Fortis and other institutions have already commissioned a pre-feasibility study for the project.

Only a quarter of Sub-Saharan Africa’s population has access to electricity. In rural areas, the percentage is much lower and the continent is literally dark. What could make more sense than harnessing the hydropower potential of the Congo River to bring electricity to the homes of Africa’s rural poor? Indeed, this is how the dam industry publicly spins its interest in building the Inga dams.

Alas, the reality looks different. Electricity is treated as a commercial product, and the poor don’t have the purchasing power to pay for expensive connections to the grid and the electricity generated by large, multi-billion dollar dams.

Grand Inga Power Grid

Grand Inga Power Grid

If Grand Inga is ever built, the electricity generated by the dam is slated to be exported to Southern Africa’s industrial centers, and across the Sahara to Europe and the Middle East. Commentator George Uwagiwabo compares the project to Africa’s colonial railway lines, which linked mines to Africa’s major ports and capitals but bypassed the majority of the population. The Grand Inga scheme would again export Africa’s natural wealth and ignore the needs of the local population.

The Inga 3 Dam meanwhile is being developed by the Westcor consortium to feed the power-hungry industries and the urban consumers of Southern Africa. In recent weeks, the mining giant BHP Billiton tried to wrest control over the project by offering the DRC government a sweeter deal. Billiton would use the power from Inga 3 to feed a smelter that will produce 800,000 tons of aluminum per year. The mining giant and Westcor are expected to meet for negotiations in the coming weeks. Whoever wins, Africa’s poor will not be among them.

Will Congo’s poor at least benefit from the revenues which the huge Inga dams might wash into government coffers one day? The chances are slim. The DRC has been ruled by a kleptocracy since colonial times. The communities who had to give up their lands for the Inga 1 and 2 dams are still fighting for compensation for their losses after 50 years – and now risk being displaced yet again for the new projects.

In a recent court decision, FG Hemisphere, a vulture fund that bought old debt of DRC’s electricity utility at bargain prices, gained the right to lay hands on the next $100 million of the utility’s revenues. As long as vulture funds and aluminum companies have more rights than the poor communities who pay the price for these projects, civil society has no reason to support the proposed dams on the Congo River.

Decentralized energy systems based on wind, solar power and micro hydro projects have a better chance of empowering Africa’s rural populations. When World Bank President Robert Zoellick visited the Inga site in August, he pointed out that “large-scale energy projects, such as Inga, should not overshadow the importance of small-scale projects, which serve the most vulnerable Africans.” Zoellick also noted “the need to adopt environmentally-sound schemes that must protect biodiversity and fisheries when energy projects are built on a river such as the Congo, which is the second richest river in the world for fish”. It will be interesting to see whether the Bank’s managers share the priorities and concerns of their President as they approach Africa’s energy sector.

Peter Bosshard is the Policy Director of International Rivers. His blog, Wet, Wild and Wonky, appears at www.internationalrivers.org/en/blog/peter-bosshard

Dealerships Needed

Empty Showrooms! Closed For Years! I am talking car dealerships in Kananga, DR Congo.

They say money can't buy you everything. Money can't buy you a car in Kananga.

Motorized transportation is necessary for breaking the cycle of poverty.


HPIM0820_edited

ICC / Democratic Republic of the Congo / The Appeals Chamber upholds the decision on the admissibility of the case against Germain Katanga



THE HAGUE, Netherland, September 25, 2009/African Press Organization (APO)/ — ICC-CPI-20090925-PR455

Situation: Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)

Case: The Prosecutor v. Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui

On 25 September, 2009, the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) dismissed the appeal of Germain Katanga against Trial Chamber II’s decision of 12 June which declared his case admissible before the ICC.

In February 2009, Mr Katanga filed a motion with Trial Chamber II challenging the admissibility of the case before the ICC. He submitted, amongst other things, that the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) was able to prosecute him and that, accordingly, he should not be prosecuted before the ICC. He further submitted that the Prosecutor, when applying for a warrant of arrest, should have disclosed to the Pre-Trial Chamber certain documents indicating that Mr Katanga was under investigation in the DRC, which, he claimed, made the case inadmissible before the Court. On 12 June, the Trial Chamber rejected the challenge. The Defence appealed this decision.

Today, Judge Daniel David Ntanda Nsereko, acting as Presiding Judge, gave a summary of the Appeals Chamber’s judgment in open court. He explained each of the five grounds for appeal and the Chamber’s respective determinations:

The Defence submitted that Trial Chamber II erred in considering that the challenge to admissibility was filed out of time and that it should have been filed prior to the “commencement of the trial”. The Appeals Chamber noted that the appellant himself acknowledged that he did not suffer any prejudice from the Trial Chamber’s allegedly erroneous interpretation of the Rome Statute, because the Trial Chamber decided to consider the merits of his admissibility challenge. Since there was no prejudice, the Appeals Chamber did not deem it necessary to consider the merits of this first ground of appeal.

The Defence submitted that Trial Chamber II erred in considering that Pre-Trial Chamber I had determined the admissibility of the case on proper grounds, since the Prosecutor failed to disclose relevant documents concerning the attacks on Bogoro for which a warrant of arrest against Germain Katanga was requested. The Appeals Chamber considered that, were it to assess the merits of this second ground for appeal, it would, in effect, be assessing the correctness of the Pre-Trial Chamber’s decision on the warrant of arrest, and not of the decision of the Trial Chamber, which was the subject of the appeal.

The third and fourth grounds of appeal related to compliance with the principle of complementarity, under which priority is given to national systems. The ICC complements national criminal justice systems rather than replacing them. The Appeals Chamber found that the complementarity principle, as enshrined in the Statute, strikes a balance between safeguarding the primacy of domestic proceedings vis-à-vis the ICC, on the one hand, and, on the other, the goal of the Rome Statute to “put an end to impunity”. If States are unwilling or unable to investigate and, where necessary, prosecute, the ICC must be able to intervene. The Appeals Chamber also noted that, at the time of the admissibility proceedings in the present case, there were no proceedings against Mr Katanga in the DRC, whether for the crimes with which he is charged before this Court, or for other alleged crimes. On the contrary, the DRC has made it clear that it wished for him to be prosecuted before the ICC.

Under the fifth ground of appeal, the Defence for Mr Katanga disputed the fact that a State can decide whether or not it is willing to prosecute international crimes “without the need to justify or explain its unwillingness”. In the opinion of the Defence, that would lead to the accused being deprived of the right to effectively challenge the admissibility of the case based on a State being unable or unwilling to prosecute. However, the Appeals Chamber considered that this argument is misconceived, and held that whether or not a case is admissible is determined by the Court, which assesses the relevant facts against the criteria of article 17 of the Statute.

For these reasons, the Appeals Chamber upheld Trial Chamber II’s decision of 12 June, 2009 and dismissed the appeal.

Germain Katanga was transferred to the ICC on 17 October 2007. The charges against him were confirmed by Pre-Trial Chamber I on 26 September 2008. He and Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui allegedly jointly committed, through other persons, crimes against humanity (murder; sexual slavery and rape) and war crimes (using children under the age of 15 to participate actively in hostilities; intentionally directing an attack against a civilian population as such or against individual civilians not taking direct part in hostilities; wilful killing; destruction of property; sexual slavery and rape). The trial in the case of The Prosecutor v. Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui is scheduled to commence on 24 November 2009.

Case Information Sheet The Prosecutor v. Germain Katanga and Mathieu Ngudjolo

For further information, please contact Ms Sonia Robla, Head of the Public Information and Documentation Section at +31 (0)70 515-8089 or +31 (0) 646448726 or at sonia.robla@icc-cpi.int.

Congo Warlord Awaits ICC Trial

Voices of Widows in Democratic Republic of Congo

Kinshasa Government Frowns on Blackmail, Says Congo Minister



25 September 2009

An official of the Democratic Republic of Congo government is warning various armed groups that the administration will not kowtow to blackmail.

Secretary of State Clinton (left) and Congo President Joseph Kabila, 12 Aug 2009
Secretary of State Clinton (left) and Congo President Joseph Kabila, 12 Aug 2009
Communications Minister Lambert Mende said the government is also determined to ensure the safety of Congolese.

This comes after a rebel group suspended participation in the 2008 Goma peace process and threatened to take up arms.

The rebel group accused President Joseph Kabila's government of failing fully to implement the agreement despite repeated promises.

Concerned citizens of restive Kivu province express worry the rebel threat will undermine the newly reached peace.

Minister Mende said that government troops are ready to quell any rebel insurgency.

"They have been given two alternatives: either joining the army, or being re-inserted socially. I think that they feel that they can't follow the rules of the army and they are pulling out from that way of solving their problems," Mende said.

He said the government is hopeful that deserting rebels would abide by the Goma agreement.

"We hope that they will go to the other way that the government is giving them. This is the way of re-inserting professionally and socially," he said.

A United Nations convoy, heading to Rutshuru in the DRC, crosses a provisional camp for internally displaced persons north of the provincial capital of Goma, 03 Nov  08
A United Nations convoy, heading to Rutshuru in the DRC, crosses a provisional camp for internally displaced persons north of the provincial capital of Goma, 03 Nov 08

Mende said the rebels will not shake Kinshasa's resolve.

"They can do whatever they think is okay for them. But we will not accept them to blackmail the state like taking again guns against the state. If they do so, they will meet appropriate reaction from the security personnel," Mende said.

He denied the government abdicated its responsibilities in the peace agreement.

"We have 25 Mai Mai groups. If one group among 25 groups says so, do you think that he is the representative of the Mai Mai? This is a small group among groups who have joined the peace agreement and they are implementing the peace agreement with our army commanders," he said.

Mende said there is a new wind of change blowing in the Congo.

"Maybe they (rebel groups) are not well aware of the situation because they think that the situation has not changed. They think that Congo is living under the threat from some neighboring countries that was giving the opportunity to some compatriots to blackmail the

Democratic Republic of Congo
Democratic Republic of Congo
Democratic Republic of Congo. Things have changed," Mende said.

He said the rebels don't pose any threat to the administration.

"First of all, we don't consider what you consider threats as a threat. We consider just Congolese people exerting their rights and speaking freely. We have not heard that somebody has taken guns, so it is something we can bear," he said.

Mende also denied the newly found peace in the Kivu provinces is under any existential threat from rebel insurgency.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Rwanda: Installing a US Protectorate in Central Africa The US was behind the Rwandan Genocide




Originally written in May 2000, the following text is Part II of Chapter 7 entitled "Economic Genocide in Rwanda", of the Second Edition of The Globalization of Poverty and the New World Order, Global Research, 2003. This text is in part based on the results of an earlier study conducted by the author together with Belgian economist and Senator Pierre Galand on the use of Rwanda's 1990-94 external debt to finance the military and paramilitary.


The civil war in Rwanda and the ethnic massacres were an integral part of US foreign policy, carefully staged in accordance with precise strategic and economic objectives.

From the outset of the Rwandan civil war in 1990, Washington's hidden agenda consisted in establishing an American sphere of influence in a region historically dominated by France and Belgium. America's design was to displace France by supporting the Rwandan Patriotic Front and by arming and equipping its military arm, the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA)

From the mid-1980s, the Kampala government under President Yoweri Musaveni had become Washington's African showpiece of "democracy". Uganda had also become a launchpad for US sponsored guerilla movements into the Sudan, Rwanda and the Congo. Major General Paul Kagame had been head of military intelligence in the Ugandan Armed Forces; he had been trained at the U.S. Army Command and Staff College (CGSC) in Leavenworth, Kansas which focuses on warfighting and military strategy. Kagame returned from Leavenworth to lead the RPA, shortly after the 1990 invasion.

Prior to the outbreak of the Rwandan civil war, the RPA was part of the Ugandan Armed Forces. Shortly prior to the October 1990 invasion of Rwanda, military labels were switched. From one day to the next, large numbers of Ugandan soldiers joined the ranks of the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA). Throughout the civil war, the RPA was supplied from United People's Defense Forces (UPDF) military bases inside Uganda. The Tutsi commissioned officers in the Ugandan army took over positions in the RPA. The October 1990 invasion by Ugandan forces was presented to public opinion as a war of liberation by a Tutsi led guerilla army.

Militarization of Uganda

The militarization of Uganda was an integral part of US foreign policy. The build-up of the Ugandan UPDF Forces and of the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA) had been supported by the US and Britain. The British had provided military training at the Jinja military base:

"From 1989 onwards, America supported joint RPF [Rwandan Patriotic Front]-Ugandan attacks upon Rwanda... There were at least 56 'situation reports' in [US] State Department files in 1991… As American and British relations with Uganda and the RPF strengthened, so hostilities between Uganda and Rwanda escalated… By August 1990 the RPF had begun preparing an invasion with the full knowledge and approval of British intelligence. 20

Troops from Rwanda's RPA and Uganda's UPDF had also supported John Garang's People's Liberation Army in its secessionist war in southern Sudan. Washington was firmly behind these initiatives with covert support provided by the CIA. 21

Moreover, under the Africa Crisis Reaction Initiative (ACRI), Ugandan officers were also being trained by US Special Forces in collaboration with a mercenary outfit, Military Professional Resources Inc (MPRI) which was on contract with the US Department of State. MPRI had provided similar training to the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) and the Croatian Armed Forces during the Yugoslav civil war and more recently to the Colombian Military in the context of Plan Colombia.

Militarization and the Ugandan External Debt

The buildup of the Ugandan external debt under President Musaveni coincided chronologically with the Rwandan and Congolese civil wars. With the accession of Musaveni to the presidency in 1986, the Ugandan external debt stood at 1.3 billion dollars. With the gush of fresh money, the external debt spiraled overnight, increasing almost threefold to 3.7 billion by 1997. In fact, Uganda had no outstanding debt to the World Bank at the outset of its "economic recovery program". By 1997, it owed almost 2 billion dollars solely to the World Bank. 22

Where did the money go? The foreign loans to the Musaveni government had been tagged to support the country's economic and social reconstruction. In the wake of a protracted civil war, the IMF sponsored "economic stabilization program" required massive budget cuts of all civilian programs.

The World Bank was responsible for monitoring the Ugandan budget on behalf of the creditors. Under the "public expenditure review" (PER), the government was obliged to fully reveal the precise allocation of its budget. In other words, every single category of expenditure --including the budget of the Ministry of Defense-- was open to scrutiny by the World Bank. Despite the austerity measures (imposed solely on "civilian" expenditures), the donors had allowed defense spending to increase without impediment.

Part of the money tagged for civilian programs had been diverted into funding the United People's Defense Force (UPDF) which in turn was involved in military operations in Rwanda and the Congo. The Ugandan external debt was being used to finance these military operations on behalf of Washington with the country and its people ultimately footing the bill. In fact by curbing social expenditures, the austerity measures had facilitated the reallocation of State of revenue in favor of the Ugandan military.

Financing both Sides in the Civil War

A similar process of financing military expenditure from the external debt had occurred in Rwanda under the Habyarimana government. In a cruel irony, both sides in the civil war were financed by the same donors institutions with the World Bank acting as a Watchdog.

The Habyarimana regime had at its disposal an arsenal of military equipment, including 83mm missile launchers, French made Blindicide, Belgian and German made light weaponry, and automatic weapons such as kalachnikovs made in Egypt, China and South Africa [as well as ... armored AML-60 and M3 armored vehicles.23 While part of these purchases had been financed by direct military aid from France, the influx of development loans from the World Bank's soft lending affiliate the International Development Association (IDA), the African Development Fund (AFD), the European Development Fund (EDF) as well as from Germany, the United States, Belgium and Canada had been diverted into funding the military and Interhamwe militia.

A detailed investigation of government files, accounts and correspondence conducted in Rwanda in 1996-97 by the author --together with Belgian economist Pierre Galand-- confirmed that many of the arms purchases had been negotiated outside the framework of government to government military aid agreements through various intermediaries and private arms dealers. These transactions --recorded as bona fide government expenditures-- had nonetheless been included in the State budget which was under the supervision of the World Bank. Large quantities of machetes and other items used in the 1994 ethnic massacres --routinely classified as "civilian commodities" -- had been imported through regular trading channels. 24

According to the files of the National Bank of Rwanda (NBR), some of these imports had been financed in violation of agreements signed with the donors. According to NBR records of import invoices, approximately one million machetes had been imported through various channels including Radio Mille Collines, an organization linked to the Interhamwe militia and used to foment ethnic hatred. 25

The money had been earmarked by the donors to support Rwanda's economic and social development. It was clearly stipulated that funds could not be used to import: "military expenditures on arms, ammunition and other military material". 26 In fact, the loan agreement with the World Bank's IDA was even more stringent. The money could not be used to import civilian commodities such as fuel, foodstuffs, medicine, clothing and footwear "destined for military or paramilitary use". The records of the NBR nonetheless confirm that the Habyarimana government used World Bank money to finance the import of machetes which had been routinely classified as imports of "civilian commodities." 27

An army of consultants and auditors had been sent in by World Bank to assess the Habyarimana government's "policy performance" under the loan agreement.28 The use of donor funds to import machetes and other material used in the massacres of civilians did not show up in the independent audit commissioned by the government and the World Bank. (under the IDA loan agreement. (IDA Credit Agreement. 2271-RW).29 In 1993, the World Bank decided to suspend the disbursement of the second installment of its IDA loan. There had been, according to the World Bank mission unfortunate "slip-ups" and "delays" in policy implementation. The free market reforms were no longer "on track", the conditionalities --including the privatization of state assets-- had not been met. The fact that the country was involved in a civil war was not even mentioned. How the money was spent was never an issue.30

Whereas the World Bank had frozen the second installment (tranche) of the IDA loan, the money granted in 1991 had been deposited in a Special Account at the Banque Bruxelles Lambert in Brussels. This account remained open and accessible to the former regime (in exile), two months after the April 1994 ethnic massacres.31

Postwar Cover-up

In the wake of the civil war, the World Bank sent a mission to Kigali with a view to drafting a so-called loan "Completion Report".32 This was a routine exercise, largely focussing on macro-economic rather than political issues. The report acknowledged that "the war effort prompted the [former] government to increase substantially spending, well beyond the fiscal targets agreed under the SAP.33 The misappropriation of World Bank money was not mentioned. Instead the Habyarimana government was praised for having "made genuine major efforts-- especially in 1991-- to reduce domestic and external financial imbalances, eliminate distortions hampering export growth and diversification and introduce market based mechanisms for resource allocation..." 34, The massacres of civilians were not mentioned; from the point of view of the donors, "nothing had happened". In fact the World Bank completion report failed to even acknowledge the existence of a civil war prior to April 1994.

In the wake of the Civil War: Reinstating the IMF's Deadly Economic Reforms

In 1995, barely a year after the 1994 ethnic massacres. Rwanda's external creditors entered into discussions with the Tutsi led RPF government regarding the debts of the former regime which had been used to finance the massacres. The RPF decided to fully recognize the legitimacy of the "odious debts" of the 1990-94. RPF strongman Vice-President Paul Kagame [now President] instructed the Cabinet not to pursue the matter nor to approach the World Bank. Under pressure from Washington, the RPF was not to enter into any form of negotiations, let alone an informal dialogue with the donors.

The legitimacy of the wartime debts was never questioned. Instead, the creditors had carefully set up procedures to ensure their prompt reimbursement. In 1998 at a special donors' meeting in Stockholm, a Multilateral Trust Fund of 55.2 million dollars was set up under the banner of postwar reconstruction.35 In fact, none of this money was destined for Rwanda. It had been earmarked to service Rwanda's "odious debts" with the World Bank (--i.e. IDA debt), the African Development Bank and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).

In other words, "fresh money" --which Rwanda will eventually have to reimburse-- was lent to enable Rwanda to service the debts used to finance the massacres. Old loans had been swapped for new debts under the banner of post-war reconstruction.36 The "odious debts" had been whitewashed, they had disappeared from the books. The creditor's responsibility had been erased. Moreover, the scam was also conditional upon the acceptance of a new wave of IMF-World Bank reforms.

Post War "Reconstruction and Reconciliation"

Bitter economic medicine was imposed under the banner of "reconstruction and reconciliation". In fact the IMF post-conflict reform package was far stringent than that imposed at the outset of the civil war in 1990. While wages and employment had fallen to abysmally low levels, the IMF had demanded a freeze on civil service wages alongside a massive retrenchment of teachers and health workers. The objective was to "restore macro-economic stability". A downsizing of the civil service was launched.37 Civil service wages were not to exceed 4.5 percent of GDP, so-called "unqualified civil servants" (mainly teachers) were to be removed from the State payroll. 38

Meanwhile, the country's per capita income had collapsed from $360 (prior to the war) to $140 in 1995. State revenues had been tagged to service the external debt. Kigali's Paris Club debts were rescheduled in exchange for "free market" reforms. Remaining State assets were sold off to foreign capital at bargain prices.

The Tutsi led RPF government rather than demanding the cancellation of Rwanda's odious debts, had welcomed the Bretton Woods institutions with open arms. They needed the IMF "greenlight" to boost the development of the military.

Despite the austerity measures, defense expenditure continued to grow. The 1990-94 pattern had been reinstated. The development loans granted since 1995 were not used to finance the country's economic and social development. Outside money had again been diverted into financing a military buildup, this time of the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA). And this build-up of the RPA occurred in the period immediately preceding the outbreak of civil war in former Zaire.

Civil War in the Congo

Following the installation of a US client regime in Rwanda in 1994, US trained Rwandan and Ugandan forces intervened in former Zaire --a stronghold of French and Belgian influence under President Mobutu Sese Seko. Amply documented, US special operations troops -- mainly Green Berets from the 3rd Special Forces Group based at Fort Bragg, N.C.-- had been actively training the RPA. This program was a continuation of the covert support and military aid provided to the RPA prior to 1994. In turn, the tragic outcome of the Rwandan civil war including the refugee crisis had set the stage for the participation of Ugandan and Rwandan RPA in the civil war in the Congo:

"Washington pumped military aid into Kagame's army, and U.S. Army Special Forces and other military personnel trained hundreds of Rwandan troops. But Kagame and his colleagues had designs of their own. While the Green Berets trained the Rwandan Patriotic Army, that army was itself secretly training Zairian rebels.… [In] Rwanda, U.S. officials publicly portrayed their engagement with the army as almost entirely devoted to human rights training. But the Special Forces exercises also covered other areas, including combat skills… Hundreds of soldiers and officers were enrolled in U.S. training programs, both in Rwanda and in the United States… [C]onducted by U.S. Special Forces, Rwandans studied camouflage techniques, small-unit movement, troop-leading procedures, soldier-team development, [etc]… And while the training went on, U.S. officials were meeting regularly with Kagame and other senior Rwandan leaders to discuss the continuing military threat faced by the [former Rwandan] government [in exile] from inside Zaire… Clearly, the focus of Rwandan-U.S. military discussion had shifted from how to build human rights to how to combat an insurgency… With [Ugandan President] Museveni's support, Kagame conceived a plan to back a rebel movement in eastern Zaire [headed by Laurent Desire Kabila] ... The operation was launched in October 1996, just a few weeks after Kagame's trip to Washington and the completion of the Special Forces training mission… Once the war [in the Congo] started, the United States provided "political assistance" to Rwanda,… An official of the U.S. Embassy in Kigali traveled to eastern Zaire numerous times to liaise with Kabila. Soon, the rebels had moved on. Brushing off the Zairian army with the help of the Rwandan forces, they marched through Africa's third-largest nation in seven months, with only a few significant military engagements. Mobutu fled the capital, Kinshasa, in May 1997, and Kabila took power, changing the name of the country to Congo…U.S. officials deny that there were any U.S. military personnel with Rwandan troops in Zaire during the war, although unconfirmed reports of a U.S. advisory presence have circulated in the region since the war's earliest days.39

American Mining Interests

At stake in these military operations in the Congo were the extensive mining resources of Eastern and Southern Zaire including strategic reserves of cobalt -- of crucial importance for the US defense industry. During the civil war several months before the downfall of Mobutu, Laurent Desire Kabila basedin Goma, Eastern Zaire had renegotiated the mining contracts with several US and British mining companies including American Mineral Fields (AMF), a company headquartered in President Bill Clinton's hometown of Hope, Arkansas.40

Meanwhile back in Washington, IMF officials were busy reviewing Zaire's macro-economic situation. No time was lost. The post-Mobutu economic agenda had already been decided upon. In a study released in April 1997 barely a month before President Mobutu Sese Seko fled the country, the IMF had recommended "halting currency issue completely and abruptly" as part of an economic recovery programme.41 And a few months later upon assuming power in Kinshasa, the new government of Laurent Kabila Desire was ordered by the IMF to freeze civil service wages with a view to "restoring macro-economic stability." Eroded by hyperinflation, the average public sector wage had fallen to 30,000 new Zaires (NZ) a month, the equivalent of one U.S. dollar.42

The IMF's demands were tantamount to maintaining the entire population in abysmal poverty. They precluded from the outset a meaningful post-war economic reconstruction, thereby contributing to fuelling the continuation of the Congolese civil war in which close to 2 million people have died.

Concluding Remarks

The civil war in Rwanda was a brutal struggle for political power between the Hutu-led Habyarimana government supported by France and the Tutsi Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) backed financially and militarily by Washington. Ethnic rivalries were used deliberately in the pursuit of geopolitical objectives. Both the CIA and French intelligence were involved.

In the words of former Cooperation Minister Bernard Debré in the government of Prime Minister Henri Balladur:

"What one forgets to say is that, if France was on one side, the Americans were on the other, arming the Tutsis who armed the Ugandans. I don't want to portray a showdown between the French and the Anglo-Saxons, but the truth must be told." 43

In addition to military aid to the warring factions, the influx of development loans played an important role in "financing the conflict." In other words, both the Ugandan and Rwanda external debts were diverted into supporting the military and paramilitary. Uganda's external debt increased by more than 2 billion dollars, --i.e. at a significantly faster pace than that of Rwanda (an increase of approximately 250 million dollars from 1990 to 1994). In retrospect, the RPA -- financed by US military aid and Uganda's external debt-- was much better equipped and trained than the Forces Armées du Rwanda (FAR) loyal to President Habyarimana. From the outset, the RPA had a definite military advantage over the FAR.

According to the testimony of Paul Mugabe, a former member of the RPF High Command Unit, Major General Paul Kagame had personally ordered the shooting down of President Habyarimana's plane with a view to taking control of the country. He was fully aware that the assassination of Habyarimana would unleash "a genocide" against Tutsi civilians. RPA forces had been fully deployed in Kigali at the time the ethnic massacres took place and did not act to prevent it from happening:

The decision of Paul Kagame to shoot Pres. Habyarimana's aircraft was the catalyst of an unprecedented drama in Rwandan history, and Major-General Paul Kagame took that decision with all awareness. Kagame's ambition caused the extermination of all of our families: Tutsis, Hutus and Twas. We all lost. Kagame's take-over took away the lives of a large number of Tutsis and caused the unnecessary exodus of millions of Hutus, many of whom were innocent under the hands of the genocide ringleaders. Some naive Rwandans proclaimed Kagame as their savior, but time has demonstrated that it was he who caused our suffering and misfortunes… Can Kagame explain to the Rwandan people why he sent Claude Dusaidi and Charles Muligande to New York and Washington to stop the UN military intervention which was supposed to be sent and protect the Rwandan people from the genocide? The reason behind avoiding that military intervention was to allow the RPF leadership the takeover of the Kigali Government and to show the world that they - the RPF - were the ones who stopped the genocide. We will all remember that the genocide occurred during three months, even though Kagame has said that he was capable of stopping it the first week after the aircraft crash. Can Major-General Paul Kagame explain why he asked to MINUAR to leave Rwandan soil within hours while the UN was examining the possibility of increasing its troops in Rwanda in order to stop the genocide?44

Paul Mugabe's testimony regarding the shooting down of Habyarimana's plane ordered by Kagame is corroborated by intelligence documents and information presented to the French parliamentary inquiry. Major General Paul Kagame was an instrument of Washington. The loss of African lives did not matter. The civil war in Rwanda and the ethnic massacres were an integral part of US foreign policy, carefully staged in accordance with precise strategic and economic objectives.

Despite the good diplomatic relations between Paris and Washington and the apparent unity of the Western military alliance, it was an undeclared war between France and America. By supporting the build up of Ugandan and Rwandan forces and by directly intervening in the Congolese civil war, Washington also bears a direct responsibility for the ethnic massacres committed in the Eastern Congo including several hundred thousand people who died in refugee camps.

US policy-makers were fully aware that a catastrophe was imminent. In fact four months before the genocide, the CIA had warned the US State Department in a confidential brief that the Arusha Accords would fail and "that if hostilities resumed, then upward of half a million people would die". 45 This information was withheld from the United Nations: "it was not until the genocide was over that information was passed to Maj.-Gen. Dallaire [who was in charge of UN forces in Rwanda]." 46

Washington's objective was to displace France, discredit the French government (which had supported the Habyarimana regime) and install an Anglo-American protectorate in Rwanda under Major General Paul Kagame. Washington deliberately did nothing to prevent the ethnic massacres.

When a UN force was put forth, Major General Paul Kagame sought to delay its implementation stating that he would only accept a peacekeeping force once the RPA was in control of Kigali. Kagame "feared [that] the proposed United Nations force of more than 5,000 troops… [might] intervene to deprive them [the RPA] of victory".47 Meanwhile the Security Council after deliberation and a report from Secretary General Boutros Boutros Ghali decided to postpone its intervention.

The 1994 Rwandan "genocide" served strictly strategic and geopolitical objectives. The ethnic massacres were a stumbling blow to France's credibility which enabled the US to establish a neocolonial foothold in Central Africa. From a distinctly Franco-Belgian colonial setting, the Rwandan capital Kigali has become --under the expatriate Tutsi led RPF government-- distinctly Anglo-American. English has become the dominant language in government and the private sector. Many private businesses owned by Hutus were taken over in 1994 by returning Tutsi expatriates. The latter had been exiled in Anglophone Africa, the US and Britain.

The Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA) functions in English and Kinyarwanda, the University previously linked to France and Belgium functions in English. While English had become an official language alongside French and Kinyarwanda, French political and cultural influence will eventually be erased. Washington has become the new colonial master of a francophone country.

Several other francophone countries in Sub-Saharan Africa have entered into military cooperation agreements with the US. These countries are slated by Washington to follow suit on the pattern set in Rwanda. Meanwhile in francophone West Africa, the US dollar is rapidly displacing the CFA Franc -- which is linked in a currency board arrangement to the French Treasury.