Monday, January 26, 2009

Congo warlord in court in landmark trial


A Congolese warlord has become the first person to apear before the international criminal court after pleading not guilty to war crime charges.

Thomas Lubanga Dyilo, the leader of the Union of Congolese Patriots, is accused of recruiting hundreds of child soldiers during the country's civil war between September 2002 and August 2003.

By appearing before magistrates at The Hague today he became the first person indicted by the world's only permanent tribunal to prosecute war crimes to do so.

More than 60,000 people died in the Ituri conflict, part of the wider second Congo war, fought largely over control of a lucrative gold-mining region.

In court today Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the ICC chief prosecutor, delivered an opening statement before lawyers for the 93 victims begin presenting 1,671 documents of evidence and 34 witnesses – including former child soldiers – take to the stand.

The trial is expected to last several months.

Source: http://www.inthenews.co.uk/news/world/international-affairs/congo-warlord-in-court-in-landmark-trial-$1263688.htm

CNN
The new International Criminal Court launched its first trial Monday at The Hague in the Netherlands -- the prosecution of a former militia leader charged with using child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of Congo's brutal civil war.

Thomas Lubanga Dyilo is accused of forcing children under the age of 15 to fight in the military wing of the Union of Congolese Patriots.

"Lubanga's armed group recruited, trained and used hundreds of young children to kill, pillage and rape. The children still suffer the consequences of Lubanga's crimes. They cannot forget what they saw, what they suffered, what they did," ICC chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo said as the trial opened on Monday morning.

Lubanga pleaded not guilty. His defense will not begin its opening statement until Tuesday. He sat largely impassively, in suit and tie, as the prosecution opened its case.

The prosecution claims to have video of Lubanga in training camps with what appear to be child soldiers, and will call former child soldiers as witnesses to testify against him.

Nineteen of the 34 witnesses will testify anonymously, with their faces hidden and their voices distorted, the court said.

Lubanga used children to "participate actively in hostilities in (the eastern) Ituri (region of the DR Congo), from September 2002 to August 2003," the prosecution alleges.

Human Rights Watch welcomed his trial, saying his militia "slaughtered thousands."

"This first ICC trial makes it clear that the use of children in armed combat is a war crime that can and will be prosecuted at the international level," said Param-Preet Singh, counsel in Human Rights Watch's International Justice Program.

The group urged the ICC to bring to trial Bosco Ntaganda, another UCP leader who has been charged but remains at large. It also called for the court to consider charging political leaders from Congo, Rwanda and Uganda.

"The ICC must go beyond local war lords like Lubanga," said Singh. "We look to the prosecutor to investigate those who supported Lubanga and other militias operating in Ituri, including senior officials in Kinshasa, Kigali, and Kampala."

Lubanga was arrested and surrendered to the ICC in March 2006.

The trial, the first since the ICC launched, was delayed for months as prosecutors and defense battled over access to evidence.

The prosecution phase of the trial is expected to last for months. It is not clear how long the defense will take, since it has not said.

The International Criminal Court, which was launched in 2002, was formed to try "persons accused of the most serious crimes of international concern," namely genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes. It is based on a treaty signed by 108 countries.

The United States does not recognize the court for fear U.S. citizens could be brought before it. Washington signed the treaty in 2000, under then-President Bill Clinton, but Congress never ratified it, so the U.S. is not a participant.

Former President George W. Bush's administration announced in 2002 it would neither support nor obstruct the ICC, which Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Marc Grossman said was "an institution of unchecked power."

The Lubanga trial comes as the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court recently said his office is paying serious attention to reports of war crimes in the country.

Moreno-Ocampo said his office has jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute war crimes in Congo. Along with the Democratic Republic of Congo, the court is investigating war crimes in Uganda, the Central African Republic and the Sudanese region of Darfur.

source:CNN Correspondent Atika Shubert contributed to this report--http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/africa/01/26/congo.hague.trial/index.html#cnnSTCText

A Congolese Rebel Leader Who Once Seemed Untouchable Is Caught

General Laurent Nkunda Nov. 2008

By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
Published: January 23, 2009

KIGALI, Rwanda — Overnight, the battle in Congo has suddenly shifted.

Gen. Laurent Nkunda, the Congolese rebel leader whose brutal tactics and Congo-size ambitions have threatened to bring about another catastrophic war in central Africa, was arrested late Thursday, removing an explosive factor from the regional equation.

According to United Nations officials and Rwandan authorities, General Nkunda was captured by Rwandan troops as he tried to escape a Congolese-Rwandan offensive that has taken aim at several rebel groups terrorizing eastern Congo.

General Nkunda had seemed untouchable, commanding a hardened rebel force that routinely humiliated Congolese troops and then calmly gliding through muddy villages in impossibly white robes. But he may never have anticipated that his old ally, the Rwandan Army, would take him away.

The surprise arrest could be a major turning point for Congo, which has been mired in rebellion and bloodshed for much of the past decade. It instantly strengthens the hand of the Congolese government, militarily and politically, right when the government seemed about to implode. But it could also empower other, even more brutal rebel figures like Jean Bosco Ntaganda, General Nkunda’s former chief of staff, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court in The Hague for war crimes.

Still, analysts and politicians say they hope that General Nkunda’s capture at the hands of Rwanda means that the proxy war between Rwanda and Congo is finally drawing to a close.

A United Nations report in December accused high-ranking Rwandan officials of sending money and troops to General Nkunda, a fellow Tutsi who claimed to be protecting Congolese Tutsi from marauding Hutu militias. This cross-border enmity has been widely blamed for much of the turmoil, destruction, killing and raping that has vexed Congo for years.

John Prendergast, a founder of the Washington-based Enough Project, which campaigns against genocide, called it a “massive turn of events.”

“Finally the two countries are cooperating,” he said.

Kikaya bin Karubi, a member of Congo’s Parliament, said General Nkunda’s arrest “could be the beginning of the end of all the misery.”

“Look what happened at Kiwanja,” he said, referring to a small Congolese town where United Nations officials said General Nkunda’s forces went door to door, summarily executing dozens of civilians in November.

Now, if Congo gets its way, General Nkunda will have to face the consequences. The government is urging Rwanda to extradite General Nkunda so he can stand trial in Kinshasa, Congo’s capital, where he could face a war crimes tribunal and treason charges, punishable by death.

But Rwandan authorities were tight-lipped on Friday about what they would do with General Nkunda. “I can’t speculate,” said Maj. Jill Rutaremara, a spokesman for Rwanda’s Defense Forces. All he would say was that General Nkunda was “in the hands of Rwandan authorities.”

Though General Nkunda never controlled more than a handful of small towns in eastern Congo, he was Congo’s No. 1 troublemaker. His troops have been accused of committing massacres dating back to 2002. General Nkunda recently began cultivating national ambitions to overthrow Congo’s weak but democratically elected government, which threatened to draw in Congo’s neighbors and plunge central Africa into a regional war, something that has happened twice before.

General Nkunda’s confidence may have been his undoing. On Thursday night, hundreds of Rwandan troops cornered him near Bunagana. Congolese officials said he refused to be arrested and crossed into Rwanda, where he was surrounded and taken into custody. It is not clear how many men he had with him at the time, but it appears he was taken without a shot.

Just a few days ago, Rwanda sent several thousand soldiers into Congo as part of a joint operation to flush out Hutu militants who had killed countless people in the 1994 Rwanda genocide and were still haunting the hills on Congo’s side of the border.

Few expected the Rwandan troops to go after General Nkunda. Not only is he a Tutsi, like Rwanda’s leaders, but he had risen to power by fighting these same Hutu militants. Several demobilized Rwandan soldiers recently revealed a secret operation to slip Rwandan soldiers into Congo to fight alongside General Nkunda. He had been trained by the Rwandan Army in the mid-1990s and was widely believed to be an agent for Rwanda’s extensive business and security interests in eastern Congo.

But it seems that the Rwandan government abruptly changed its tack, possibly because of the international criticism it has endured for its ties to General Nkunda. Several European countries recently cut aid to Rwanda, sending a strong signal to a poor country that needs outside help. Rwanda may have figured the time was ripe to remove General Nkunda, analysts said.

Earlier this month, some of General Nkunda’s top commanders split from him, saying they were fed up with his king-of-the-world brand of leadership. One of those commanders was Mr. Ntaganda. Prosecutors at the International Criminal Court have accused him of building an army of child soldiers, a war crime.

But Mr. Ntaganda suddenly switched sides, denouncing General Nkunda and saying that he and his men were now eager to join the Congolese Army, which they had been battling for years. Many analysts believe that the Congolese government promised to try to protect Mr. Ntaganda from being sent to The Hague.

According to Jason Stearns, an analyst who recently served on a United Nations panel examining the conflict: “It’s fairly clear that Kigali and Kinshasa have struck a deal. Kinshasa will allow Rwanda onto Congolese soil to hunt down” the Hutu militants, “and in return Rwanda will dethrone Nkunda.”

Congolese officials are now talking about restoring full diplomatic relations with Rwanda, which had been suspended for years, and reinvigorating economic ties. But many uncertainties remain, including a possible power scramble by other militant groups hoping to fill the vacuum.

“Nkunda’s arrest is part of a larger, radical realignment,” Mr. Stearns said. “There are, however, many unknowns and risks.”

Josh Kron contributed reporting.

source: New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/24/world/africa/24congo.html?_r=1&hp

Conference Call Minutes 1-25-2009

Conference Call Minutes 01-25-2009


Date: Sunday, January 25, 2009

Time: 8:00 PM EST

Call in #: 712-432-1601

Access Code: 307891


Participants:

Muamba Kabongo

Felicia Kadima

Tania Kasongo

Tshilumba Kabongo

Carina Tubajika

Marco Nkashama


Topics to be discussed:


Distribution of LB YAO Key chains
There are 30 key chains that are still available for distribution, please let me (Tania Kasongo) know ASAP if you want any
Here are the people who already have/requested key chains:
Muadi Mukenge – 10
Felicia Kadima – 15
Muamba Kabongo – 10
Tshilumba Kabongo – 10
Kalonji Kadima – 10
Nadine Kasongo - 10
We are asking for a minimum $5 donation for the key chains
Felicia proposed trying to sell different key chains in the future that just say “Congo” and nothing about LB so that we can sell to a wider audience
We will check again at the end of March to see how everyone as done on sales and pending on the success we will try another key chain design


SF concert collaboration between Kono and Tshilumba
Not discussed; Tshilumba will discuss with Kono


Whether we will be pursuing t-shirts for fundraising
For now, we have decided against t-shirts for fundraising
We will try to get t-shirts to order for the LB conference
I will contact my t-shirt connect to see if he can embroider and this way we may get polos


Save The Date
Get dates confirmed for LB events coming this year
West Coast regional fundraiser ; Concert
Date TBD once details are confirmed
Midwest regional fundraiser ; Benefit Dinner
Felicia would like to have it in May; if not then maybe September
Southwest regional fundraiser; TBD
This will be a small regional event for Dallas
East Coast regional fundraiser; TBD
LB 2009
July 3-5, 2009




Have a great week and remember:


WE RUN DRC!!!

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Africa: Obama And U.S. Policy Towards Africa

By Horace Campbell

15 January 2009

Introduction on the author
As Obama takes over the presidency of the United States, Horace Campbell contextualizes an Obama presidency in the realities of Africa and the ongoing global finance crisis. He argues that "capitalism should not be reconstituted and rebuilt on the backs and bodies of Africans." For Campbell, the crisis is not simply a cyclical crisis of capitalism; it is a fundamental shift in the global political and economic order. In light of this fast changing world, Campbell is also interested in the possibilities and our responsibilities in bringing about change in and for Africa.

Analysis by Horace Campbell
Writing at the end of September 2008, the chief policy adviser to the candidate Senator Barack Obama spelt out the foreign policy goals as they related to Africa in this way:

"Barack Obama understands Africa, and understands its importance to the United States. Today, in this new century, he understands that to strengthen our common security, we must invest in our common humanity and, in this way, restore American leadership in the world.

"As a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he has engaged on many African issues. He has worked to end genocide in Darfur, to pass legislation to promote stability and the holding of elections in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to bring a war criminal to justice in Liberia and to develop a coherent strategy for stabilizing Somalia."

From this broad outline the adviser (who had been trained in one of the elite African Studies Centers in the United States) went on to outline three goals of the candidate:

* One is to accelerate Africa's integration into the global economy.

* A second is to enhance the peace and security of African states.

* And a third is to strengthen relationships with those governments, institutions and civil society organizations committed to deepening democracy, accountability and reducing poverty in Africa.

THE REALITY

The contradictions between the goals and the stated strategic objective of "investing in a shared humanity" brings to the fore the tensions and contradictions between the campaign of Senator Obama and the mindset of the thinking behind achieving goals for the United States and for the peoples of Africa. Between the time of the statement of this adviser in September and the elections in November, the realities of the global capitalist crisis had become very clear for the citizens of the United States. Citizens of Africa were always aware of the exploitation, hunger and death that came with capitalist relations of production. When Julius Nyerere had called for a revolution embedded in the African values of Ujamaa and self reliance, there was a political and ideological war against the peoples of Tanzania and any society in Africa that dared to be independent. Nationalization of the people's wealth to ensure equal opportunities was rubbished by US policymakers.

Yet, in ten weeks between September and November 2008, the US government moved to nationalize banks, insurance companies and to invest billions of dollars (to bail out) the automobile industry. When the campaign ended and Senator Obama became President-elect Obama, it became clearer that neo-liberalism was dead or was dying. Neo-conservatives and the gurus of market fundamentalism were on the retreat, but in the Obama transition, there was no real break from the old mindset of US policymakers in relation to Africa. From the names and institutions that appeared in the transition process it was clear that the transition to an Obama Presidency will not, in the short term, reflect the kind of change that was promised in the election campaign. Instead of a future of sustainable peace and transformation, one saw a re-emergence and recycling of the same militarists such as Susan Rice emerging as a top official of the US foreign policy establishment. Lawrence Summers, who wrote the memo that it was more economical to dump toxic waste in Third World Countries, emerged as a major economic adviser.

A clear reading of five subject areas with international relations components in the transition team process indicates that Africa in general is likely to be a minor area of focus in their research process. These areas are:

1. State Department and Foreign Policy

2. International Economic Policy (USAID, World Bank, IMF, Treasury, Commerce, US Trade, OPIC, Ex-IM Bank, Agriculture)

3. Health/Human Services (HIV-AIDS)

4. National Security (DoD, AFRICOM and War on terror)

5. Energy (African oil)

In terms of operation, the team took its findings from each department and developed the Obama's administration's first internal white papers for each branch of government. Outside groups and entities with long-term interest in African resources were also submitting white papers on individual subjects into the transition team process. Hence, the final papers of the transition represented a product of both internal research and external contributions.

WHO TRAINED THESE POLICYMAKERS?

From the website of the transition process and the public relations web page of the Obama, one can see that the individuals and organizations that have been involved in the formulation of foreign and domestic policies were the same ones complicit in the think tanks, corporations, governmental agencies and Universities that devalued the lives of Africa. Of the eight major teams for the transition, this author zeroed in on the five areas of the transition that were directly related to the formulation of US policy under Obama.

The same lack of confidence that there will be a changed relationship with Africa emerges from the Cabinet choices that have been made by Barack Obama subsequent to the clarification of the road from transition to assuming power. Not even the African Americans who are touted to be the internal brains trust inspire confidence that there will be a change. The New York Time has reported that three persons- Valerie Jarrett, Martin Nesbitt and Dr. Eric Whitaker- are the closest advisers of Barack Obama.

While transition team operatives maintained that US policy towards Africa was at present a low priority (insofar as the US is preoccupied with the crisis of the economy and the questions of war and peace in Iraq and Afghanistan) there is no let up on the ground in Africa in the promotion of US 'national interests' through the State Department, the Department of Defense, the Treasury Department, the Department of Energy and a multitude of groups who are supporting AID projects. The day-to-day operations of the US bureaucrats continue to promote the neo-conservative and neo-liberal policies of the western imperial ideation system.

Examples of where these policies are being pursued include: The full speed attempt to militarize Africa under the guise of the so called war on terror. This is manifest in the transition pledge to continue the establishment of the US Africa Command and a US led international naval force off the coast of Somalia.

The second area where this is clear is that despite the fact that neo-liberalism and the market fundamentalism has been discredited in the USA, these policies are still being promoted by the IMF, the World bank and the host of US agencies that are now operating in Africa. In September 2008, when this global capitalist crisis was becoming evident to the world, Alan Greenspan testified before Congress. He said, "I have found a flaw. I don't know how significant or permanent it is. But I have been very distressed by that fact."

What Greenspan was politely saying was that the thinking behind the neoconservative oriented economic policies that had been promoted in the United States and overseas is wrong. During the hearing, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA), was not satisfied by the use of the word 'flaw.' Waxman wanted a stronger term. He then asked Greenspan to clarify his words:

"In other words, you found that your view of the world, your ideology, was not right, it was not working," Waxman said.

"Absolutely, precisely," Greenspan replied. "You know, that's precisely the reason I was shocked, because I have been going for 40 years or more with very considerable evidence that it was working exceptionally well."

This admission that for forty years the underlying assumptions, rationales and thinking which served as the foundation of the economic policies of the United States in the USA and overseas was wrong, must be discussed at every level in Africa. Will African governments be comfortable with accepting this statement that they were being bullied into adopting wrong policies? Or will African intellectuals, trade unionists, policy makers and ordinary citizens redouble the efforts to end the domination of the International Financial Institutions over the lives of the people?

Obama's policy towards Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) particularly regarding medicines will be important. Already, Democrats in the Congress led by Charles Rangel have said that the USG should not put the interests of IPR holders in US trade agreements, over the human health interests in poor nations.

Will Obama push that position further or will he fight against it?

It now devolves to the oppressed in Africa to join forces with others in the Global South to push for the dismantling of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. The dollar as the currency of World Trade is coming to the end of an inglorious period. It is not in the interests of the people of Africa for the Euro and for the European Union to be the beneficiary of the collapse of US capitalism. It is the task of Africans to work for the overthrow of capitalism in Africa and beyond. Capitalism should not be reconstituted and rebuilt on the backs and bodies of Africans. This crisis is not simply a cyclical crisis of capitalism; it is a fundamental shift in the global political and economic order.

While progressive African peoples at home and abroad were excited about the election of Barack Obama, it was clear that the alternatives to US government policies for Africa had to emerge from the combined efforts of the social forces within Africa who had a vested interest in making a break with the plunder and looting of Africa. From the actions and activities of the dominant groups in the United States that interact with the elites of Africa, the emphasis is on the 'strategic' resources of Africa, without a real consideration for the quality of lives of the people. Walter Rodney had identified this class of Africans who were allies of imperialism in the book, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. Since the era of neo-liberalism and IMF structural adjustment, the conception of 'underdevelopment' and 'exploitation' has been replaced by the language of 'donor agencies' partners for development and 'democratic governance.' The brightest from the institutions of higher learning were seduced into the multi billion dollar aid sector called the 'humanitarian' and 'non-governmental organization' sector. Many of these international NGO workers in Africa are now caught at a crossroads where there is fear that 'donor funds' will be drying up because of the global capitalist crisis.

It is urgent that the progressives on both sides of the Atlantic call for a full exposure of the 'other flawed' policies of the United States such as the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act and the Millennium Challenge Corporation. Under the Bush administration the apartheid health policies associated with the conservative ideas about reproductive rights have been trumpeted as a success in Africa. So tenacious has been the propaganda about the health policies of the Bush administration in Africa that even within the Obama transition there is an acceptance that the PEPFAR of Bush has been beneficial for Africa. For those who want to continue to accept propaganda that "the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), holds a unique place in the history of public health for its size and scope," I would only want to urge a read of the book, Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present.

Health and peace are inextricably linked in all parts of the world, The African traditional healers, cultural workers and caregivers are joining the mass of 6 billion citizens of the planet earth who are calling for investment in caring, not killing. It is a major contradiction to trumpet the support for the recovery of health delivery services in Africa while supporting the remilitarization of Africa.

Will progressives accept that the US policies were' flawed' or symbolic of the structural relations of US imperialism in Africa? One of the by-products of the neo-liberal discourse was the reality that the understanding of imperial exploitation and plunder had been replaced by the new 'humanitarian imperialism' that was presented behind the international non-governmental infrastructure. Can the Obama administration justify an Economic Recovery program for the United States of over US $700 billion while advocating the use of 'market forces' to shelter the plunder of African resources?

OBAMA MUST REPUDIATE THE PLANNED US AFRICA COMMAND

If the economic and diplomatic policies of the USA prior to Barack Obama had been 'flawed', then one needs an appropriate formulation to properly describe the US security policies towards Africa. In December 2008, Larry Devlin joined the ancestors. Before he departed this land, Devlin wrote a book entitled, Chief of Station, Congo: A Memoir 1960-1967. This was a book celebrating the role played by Devlin while he was the Chief of the Station of the Central Intelligence Agency in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. There was no remorse in this book about the role of the United States in the destabilization of the Congo subsequent to the assassination of Patrice Lumumba and the support for Mobutu for thirty five years. If anything, Devlin was celebrating the work of the US military and economic agencies. In his logic, everything that the US did during the Cold War was justified in the name of fighting communism.

This logic of Devlin is the same logic of the intellectual institutions of the United States. Peace and conflict resolution centers abound in order to promote the distorted logic of Larry Devlin or other writers who then complain about state failure in Africa. Progressive African Intellectuals must begin to document the criminal actions that perpetuated war and instability in every region of Africa. Not only did the USA support destruction and apartheid under this logic, but today there is support for private military contractors who are operating to protect the oil companies that are polluting Africa's rivers and communities.

Today the peoples of the Democratic Republic of the Congo are reaping the full harvest of the long term investment in militarism and destruction. Yet, instead of a full retreat from the history of military engagement, the members of the US foreign policy establishment continue to call for the establishment of the US Africa Command. It would appear from the public statements of those around the Obama team that the question of change does not apply to Africa and Africans.

RESIST AFRICOM AT HOME AND ABROAD

This is not to suggest that there are no forces within the United States working to dismantle the plans for the US Africa Command. There is such a force within the broad alliance of activists who are pledged to ensure that the Obama administration abandon the plans for the Africa Command. Thus far, the Resist Africom forces in the United States have not been able to achieve their objective of scrapping the Africa command, but the work to end militarism in Africa is tied up with the domestic opposition to militarism and the prison industrial complex in America.

It should be repeated that the foreign policy of a state is a reflection of the domestic political structures of the state. Up to the present, the domestic policy of the United States has been to oppress and exploit Africans and peoples of color. It then stands to reason that one could not expect the foreign policy of the United States toward Africa to be different from the domestic policy of institutionalized racism.

From the period of the transatlantic slave trade, the leaders of the United States have viewed Africa as a treasure trove to be plundered. In this enterprise of looting and plunder, the US experts on Africa thus far had an alliance with the rulers in Africa. This intervention is to link with those forces in Africa who want to turn the global capitalist crisis into an opportunity for strengthening the social classes in Africa with a vested interest in making a break with the traditions of looting. Every region of the world now sees Africa as the place where there are real resources. Hence China, India, the European Union, Brazil and the United States have all embarked on new ventures to "accelerate Africa's integration into the global economy."

IMPERIAL RIVALRIES IN AFRICA

The irony is that each of these societies seeks to embark on larger economies of scale while working to undermine efforts at continental unity among the peoples of Africa. The leaders of the European Union have been the most active in their plans to intensify the exploitation of Africa. From North Africa, France promises to further weaken and divide Africa with a planned Mediterranean Union. Libya opposes this plan by France and, in order to compete with France, the USA is strengthening its ties with Libya. Progressives in the Pan-African world must oppose the French plan, but they must also oppose the opportunism and cynicism of the US foreign policy 'forward planners.' Cooperation and competition between the USA and Europe is intended to weaken the African Union. In the past, US policy makers have identified client states such as South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, Kenya and Uganda as partners. It is in the interest of the peoples of Africa and the peoples of the United States that a government that wants to move beyond the imperial past engage with the continent as a whole and strengthen the progressive forces who arre working for the establishment of the African Union.

In the past year, there have been open editorial campaigns for the US and the EU to form an alliance against China in Africa. Centers for strategic studies in the USA continue to blow hot and cold as to whether the USA should cooperate with China in Africa or confront China in Africa.

It is well known that capitalist competition leads to war. In the present crisis of global capitalism, there are policymakers in both the United States and Europe who are overtly calling for a military confrontation in Africa. The frontline for this proposed war against China is in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In this enterprise of seeking a pretext for war, the western imperialists have willing allies in Eastern Africa in both Rwanda and Uganda. Thus far, the drumbeat for this confrontation is being hidden under the call for the expansion of the United Nations monitoring forces in the DRC.

Sustainable peace in Africa and a transformation of the militarized institutions that have been established in Africa since the colonial era requires a break with the old US security policies. This author has joined in the forces of peace who are working to build a new Pan Africa peace infrastructure for Africans and peace loving peoples all over the world. Such an infrastructure project must break with the pre-occupation with strategic minerals and energy that is based on the extraction of petroleum resources. Peace and transformation in Africa is inseparable from a break with environmental destruction in Africa. Just as how there is now an understanding in the USA that the society needs an Economic Recovery program that is based on the 'Green collar economy', there is also an understanding in Africa that African economic transformation must be built around the provision of food, clothing, shelter and health care for the peoples of Africa.

REPARATIONS AND JUSTICE

It is on the question of reparations and the building of a strong Union of the peoples of Africa where the progressive forces in the United States will have to pressure the new Obama administration to support reparations and sustainable peace in Africa. Already, Bishop Desmond Tutu has called on Obama to apologize on behalf of the American state to the peoples of Iraq for the invasion and destruction caused by the neo-conservatives of the past Bush administration. This author wants to support that call for reparations along with calling on representatives such as John Conyers to revive the legislation for reparations and reparative justice. On the website of one of the most senior lawmakers in the USA there is the declaration that:

In January of 1989, Mr. Conyers first introduced the bill H.R. 40, the Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African Americans Act. He has reintroduced H.R. 40 every Congress since 1989, and will continue to do so until it's passed into law.

This author is calling on all progressives to join in the call to extend this assertion by Conyers so that, in the short run, the government of the United States re-engages with the process of the World Conference against Racism, when it convenes in Geneva in April 2009.

FAILURE, FLAWS OR CRIMES IN AFRICA

It is now clear from the transition team of Obama that there is no new thinking on Africa. On the web site of the Obama election campaign, the adviser on Africa boasted that Obama:

"As a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he has engaged on many African issues. He has worked to end genocide in Darfur, to pass legislation to promote stability and the holding of elections in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to bring a war criminal to justice in Liberia and to develop a coherent strategy for stabilizing Somalia."

Who will be able to educate the Obama Presidency that the road to peace in Darfur and in the DRC is linked to demilitarization globally? Obama cannot continue the duplicity of the Bush administration that continues to have security and intelligence sharing with the government of the Sudan while maintaining that it is working to end the genocide in Darfur. Peace in Africa and demilitarization in the United States are two sides of the same coin.

Barack Obama is the son of a Kenyan immigrant. His father met an early demise from the deformed politics of division and manipulation in Kenya. Obama is going into the White House with a keen sense of the realities of the impoverishment of the people of Africa. It is the same Obama who understands that change can only come through organization. After all it was Senator Obama who campaigned on a pledge:

"I don't want to just end the war," he said early this year. "I want to end the mindset that got us into war."

Africans at home and abroad must inspire a new mindset so that all of the differing agencies, foundations and academic institutions in the USA can move to a new vision of relating to Africans as full human beings. By every measure, the victory of Obama is historic. Obama will either be a great President moving the society beyond the traditions of militarism and support for dictators or be another imperial President who happens to have a father from Kenya. The choice is not up to Obama. The choice is dependent on the extent to which the progressive forces use the opening provided by the election of Obama to bring about the change we want.

Horace Campbell, is professor of African American studies at Syracuse University, and author of Rasta and Resistance, from Marcus Garvey to Walter Rodney, and Reclaiming Zimbabwe: The Exhaustion of the Patriarchal Model of Liberation.

Copyright © 2009 Fahamu. All rights reserved. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com).

http://allafrica.com/stories/200901170018.html

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Mbenga Foundation



Didier Ilunga-Mbenga is a back up center for the NBA's Los Angeles Lakers

You haven’t heard much from D.J. Mbenga this season, as he’s buried behind Pau Gasol, Andrew Bynum and Lamar Odom on L.A.’s bench.

But take a few moments to speak with him, and you immediately realize that he has a great deal to say, and not just about basketball.

Mbenga, who was born in Congo but forced to grow up in Belgium due to political circumstances in his home country, has an insatiable desire for learning, and spends much of his free time keeping up with the latest world news, particularly the largely dire situation in Congo. Indeed, when I stroll by Mbenga’s locker before most games, it’s not that night’s opponent but the latest news around which our conversations center, even if just for a minute.

Accordingly, prior to Tuesday night’s game in Houston, we began to talk about Congo since Rockets center Dikembe Mutombo is actually from the same town as D.J., and has served as Mbenga’s big brother since Mbenga came into the league. Mutombo’s done amazing things for his people in Africa, including putting a widely-reported $16 million of his own money to build a hospital.

And while Mbenga is extremely proud of Mutombo and will always look up to him, his focus is education.

“We’re trying to educate these people and especially these young kids,” Mbenga explained. “Even one dollar is a lot for someone over there, so that’s why we do everything we can … Education is very important. When you educate, you save the world.”

As such, Mbenga has actually set up a foundation - The Mbenga Foundation - specifically designed to help children in Africa, which you can link to below:

http://www.mbengafoundation.org/

DR Congo doctor is 'top African'



A doctor from the Democratic Republic of Congo who treats women raped by combatants in the war-torn country has been named "African of the Year".

Denis Mukwege, 53, who runs a clinic in Bukavu, has said all sides have "declared women their common enemy".

He says his award from the Nigerian Daily Trust paper of $20,000 (£13,700) will be used to fund a centre to help rape victims rejoin society.

His clinic receives an average of 10 new patients every day.

Women in DR Congo are often raped and subjected to terrible violence by armed men as part of the decade-old conflict.

The Panzi hospital helps women with the physical and psychological injuries after being attacked.

It also provides help for women who have contracted HIV/Aids from their attackers.

A third of patents undergo major surgery.

Appalled

This is the first African of the Year Award, given by Nigerian newspaper the Daily Trust

"I am pleased to accept this award if it will highlight the situation of women in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo," Dr Mukwege told the BBC French service after accepting the award at a ceremony in Nigeria's capital, Abuja.

The head of the selection panel was Salim Ahmed Salim, former prime minister of Tanzania and former general secretary of the Organisation of African Unity.

"This is a person who has been involved in the protection of women under difficult circumstances, often at the risk of his own life," Mr Salim told the BBC.

Earlier this month Dr Mukwege was awarded the Olof Palme prize, awarded for outstanding achievement in promoting peace.

As a child Dr Mukwege would accompany his father, a Pentecostal minister, on his visits to hospital to pray for patients.

He decided he wanted to become a doctor to help people with more than just prayer.

While working at a hospital he was appalled by the number of women who were dying in childbirth.

He went to France to study gynaecology, and returned to set up a clinic in Lemera, South Kivu in the east of the country.

The hospital was destroyed in 1996, during the civil war.

Almost as soon as a new clinic in Bukavu opened, it became obvious to Dr Mukwege there was a special need for a clinic that dealt with victims of sexual violence.

Source BBC News:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7828027.stm

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Conference Call 1-11-2009

Conference Call Meeting Minutes 01-11-2009

Date: Sunday, January 11, 2009
Time: 8:00 PM EST
Call in #: 712-432-1601
Access Code: 307891

Participants:
Nadine Kasongo
Felicia Kadima
Kalonji Kadima
Muamba Kabongo
Tshilumba Kabongo
Tania Kasongo


Topics discussed:

 Finalize fundraiser for each region
 Midwest
 Felicia is planning a fundraising banquet
 West
 Kono is collaborating with Tshilumba on a concert in Cali
 East
 A large health organization has expressed interest in funding LB clinic to Nadine
 South
 Marco has many fundraising activities currently occurring in Dallas, TX

 Decide on a national fundraising project
 Will most likely be key chains; but there are only 26 available; we will see how sales go before we re-up

 LB YAO Agenda for 2009 conference

 Felicia proposed having a planning committee for the conference
 So far the only members are Felicia and Tania
 Please inform Felicia ASAP if you would like to help plan events for the weekend of the conference in Dallas
 Tania will work on brochure for conference

 Some ideas for activities were:
 Workshops (i.e. Tshiluba class, teaching traditional songs, etc.)
 Reception/networking party for older LB YAO members
 Goat roast : )


 Outreach to other members
 Now is the time to contact your family and friends that are affiliated with LB and inform them of the 2009 conference so that they may plan on purchasing tickets and reserving a hotel

 Fundraising banquet
 One of Felicia Kadima’s ideas
 Felicia has collaborated with her church to plan a fundraising banquet; 50% of proceeds will go to LB and the other 50% will go to her church
 Targeting 300 guests
 Projection of about $15,000 in funds raised
 Many activities such as,
 Silent auction
 Musical performance
 Fashion show

 Open forum
 Felicia encouraged us to get our money right because LB has only raised $5,000 and that is VERY short of the goal…let’s get this clinic built!


Have a great week and remember:

WE RUN DRC!!!

Saturday, January 10, 2009

1-11-2009 Call Agenda

Conference Call Agenda 01-11-2009

Date: Sunday, January 11, 2009
Time: 8:00 PM EST
Call in #: 712-432-1601
Access Code: 307891

Once you enter the access code, you will be prompted with other steps and then you are on the call!


Topics to be discussed:

 Finalize fundraiser for each region

 Decide on a national fundraising project

 LB YAO Agenda for 2009 conference

 We need to have activities for the youth and for the professionals.

 Examples could be, a Networking Reception the first night (bring your business card and "side hustle" information), workshops for younger kids, the soccer game previously mentioned.)

 Outreach to other members
 How are we doing on outreach to other LBs

 Fundraising banquet
 One of Felicia Kadima’s ideas; she will have further details on the call

 Open forum
 To discuss any new topics; news; questions; concerns; ideas; etc.


Hope to hear from you Sunday night! Have a great weekend and remember:

WE RUN DRC!!!

Conference Call Minutes 1-4-2009

Conference Call Minutes 01-04-2009

Date: Sunday, January 4, 2009
Time: 8:00-8:35 PM EST
Call in #: 712-432-1601

Participants:
Kalonji Kadima
Thierry Tubajika
Muamba Kabongo
Muadi Mukenge
Nadine Kasongo
Tania Kasongo


Topics discussed:

 Distribution of LB YAO Key chains
 Idea was to sell key chains for a minimum $5 donation and if the consumer would like to pay more, no objections

 Had a difficult time in deciding if distribution should only go to financial contributors; or if they can go to those who contribute time and interest
 Decided that each person will choose how to distribute

 I have 96 key chains left and 60 are already allotted to different LB YAO members

 2009 Agenda for LB YAO
 Muamba’s question for the group was, “How do we stay on par”

 Some suggestions he had were:
 Have a pledge
 4 regional strategies for fundraising and recruiting
 1 national strategy for fundraising and recruiting (i.e. chocolate bars; t-shirts; etc.)

 Fundraising
 Muadi and Muamba will work together to finalize the proposal letter for SELF

 Thierry discussed some fundraising ideas including tax season
 He has a tax business that he is associated with
 The proposal to clients is to donate $20-30 from their refund or referral fee; or for their company to donate $20-30 for each person whose taxes they file
 Thierry projects $1500-2000 that could be raised

 Newsletter
 I discussed some ideas that I will have for the next issue which should be distributed in March

 I will send Thierry a word format of the letter so that he may decrease the MB size

 Roles/Responsibilities for non-committee members of LB YAO
 The plan is to have more pro-active people on the executive committee of LB YAO so that there will be more opportunities to get involved

 Carina Tubajika stepped up and called me on Monday evening stating that she is sorry she could not make the call since she was caught up
 She has been busy promoting LB and has already raised some co-workers interests who have pledged to make a donation
 THANK YOU FOR YOUR INITIATIVE MS. CARINA ☺

 Open forum
 Nothing new came up in this portion


Hope to hear from you on the next call Sunday; January 11, 2009 at 8pm EST! Have a great weekend and remember:

WE RUN DRC!!!

Solving the Kivu Equations

Democratic Republic of Congo
Comment: Solving the Kivu EquationS ICC - Africa Update

Region’s troubles caused by internal and external factors – a solution must take both into account.
By Eugène Bakama Bope in Brussels (AR No. 196, 19-Dec-08)
The conflict raging in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, RDC, has not grabbed the attention of the international community like the Rwandan genocide of 1994 or the war in Darfur.

However, everything indicates that the DRC has experienced a drama without precedent. The war has claimed the lives of five million people mostly from the east, and there are more than half a million refugees living in terrible conditions.

While Congo and Rwanda trade accusations about who is responsible, a string of rebel movements continue killing and illegally exploiting Congo’s natural resources, and it becomes increasingly clear that the 2006 elections were not enough to introduce real democracy.

The presence of FDLR soldiers – Rwandan Hutus who fled into Congo after the genocide and now control part of the illegal mineral trade in the east – is a pretext for Rwanda to attack the Kivus.

The FDLR are also used by Laurent Nkunda as a justification for his “protection” of the Tutsi minority. As if defending a minority is an acceptable excuse for massacring other Congolese ethnic groups.

That’s the Kivu equation, but how can it be solved?

Diplomacy is one option for ending the cycle of violence, but this has been tried and so far failed. There have been United Nations resolutions, MONUC peacekeepers and numerous peace agreements – Nairobi I, Goma, Nairobi II. European and American negotiators have all trekked to Kinshasa and Goma.

But diplomacy isn’t enough. To chase the genocidaire Hutus back home or elsewhere, neutralise Nkunda, secure the borders and block the illegal trade of minerals, a strong army is needed. For an army to be strong, it has to be sufficiently motivated and well-equipped. The Congolese army is neither of those things, and often the abuser rather than protector.

Some are pleading in favour of the deployment of a European Union-led military stabilisation force to reassure the population which does not trust the UN peacekeepers anymore. That force would have a deterrent effect on the troublemakers.

But the Europeans are divided and unenthusiastic about getting involved in a regional quagmire and are instead pushing a political and diplomatic solution. In spite of the request by UN secretary general Ban Ki-Moon, no European country except Belgium has clearly expressed support for military action.

General Henri Bentegeat, chairman of the EU military committee, said in a recent interview that the EU does not want to completely discredit MONUC since the latter still has a great deal of work to do in the Congo.

As far as MONUC’s credibility is concerned, it is important to stress that the UN force has so far not been able to protect civilian populations from Nkunda’s troops. This increases the feeling of abandonment.

There are calls for the MONUC mandate to be reinforced but that mandate is already strong and pro-active. UN Security Council Resolution 1794 from December 2007 says that peacekeepers must “use all necessary means to protect civilians under imminent threat of physical violence, particularly in the Kivus”. It says “the protection of civilians must be given priority in decisions about the use of available capacity and resources” and that MONUC can support the army “with a view to disarming the recalcitrant foreign and Congolese armed groups”.

The problem will not be solved by another mandate or by bringing in 3,000 additional troops as the Security Council decided in November. The Congolese government is said to oppose the deployment of more Indian peacekeepers, who have been accused of serious crimes against civilians in the east, such as the sexual abuse of minors. The Indian and Pakistani contingents who make up the bulk of the MONUC force have no will to fight for peace.

The International Criminal Court, ICC, could help but hasn’t so far.

It should investigate the crimes being committed by all the warring parties in North Kivu, particular the massacre at Kiwanja where according to Human Rights Watch 150 people were killed by Nkunda’s soldiers and others, not far from a UN base. These crimes must not go unpunished.

Victims see that Nkunda has already gone unpunished for the Bukavu massacres of 2004 and that nothing has been done about that by the Office of the Prosecutor of the ICC.

The region’s troubles have been caused by factors from outside the country but also from within. The solution must take both of these things into account.

The international community must take responsibility by sending in an intervention force which will surely help in forcing the combatants to respect the ceasefire.

It is also necessary to revive the Goma and Nairobi peace agreements by pressuring Rwanda to stop supporting Nkunda and the Congolese government to stop its complicity with the FDLR. Only then can the government regain state authority throughout Congo and the “Kivu equation” be solved once and for all.

Eugène Bakama Bope is president of Friends of the Law in Congo and an IWPR contributor.

Sources: Institute for War and Peace Reporting

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