Africa is on the verge of another genocide

I was surprised to read that 3 million people have already been killed in the civil war in DR Congo, a fact which has gone largely unnoticed by the rest of the world. But it’s time the entire international community got it’s act together and take immediate action to stop another genocide occuring on the scale of Rwanda.

http://www.iht.com/articles/96539.html

Africa is on the verge of another genocide

The UN must act

BRUSSELS After 800,000 men, women and children were slaughtered in Rwanda nine years ago, everyone said “never again.” But unless the United Nations Security Council moves swiftly and decisively, another African genocide seems distressingly imminent. The place this time is the small, mineral-rich Ituri Province in northeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, where jammed together live 5 million Hema and Lendu - names that may soon become as indelibly inscribed on our collective conscience as Tutsi and Hutu. The war in the Congo has already caused the deaths of 3 million people; in Ituri alone 50,000 people have been killed and 200,000 displaced since 1999. Alarmingly, worse seems likely unless foreign troops are sent immediately.
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Ituri’s current crisis has its roots in colonial history, with the Hema minority enjoying greater privileges and better education than the majority Lendu. After the collapse of state authority in 1998, the Hema leadership grabbed control of land and key gold mines, enlisting support from Ugandan army officers. Lendu militias retaliated and there has been a downward spiral of violence since. Since the end of April, Ugandan forces have finally been withdrawing, in accordance with the larger Congo peace agreement signed last September. But in the last few days a Hema group, backed by Rwanda, seized the provincial capital, Bunia, and sent ethnic Lendu fleeing. The UN mission in Congo, known as MONUC, was supposed to fill the security vacuum as Uganda left, but its 712 troops in Bunia were unable to stop the fighting. Crippled by Security Council delays over troop deployment, it completely failed to exert its authority. And Rwanda, it seems, has been only too willing to humiliate the UN mission and undercut the transition government soon to be formed in Kinshasa.
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The responsibility for the present drift and impotence is shared. Britain keeps trying to knock Ugandan and Rwandan government heads together, but also goes on giving them both generous unconditional aid - a policy ripe for reconsideration. It is critical that Uganda and Rwanda, whose proxy warfare has already caused so much Congo misery, be put under real pressure to stay out of Ituri for good. UN efforts have been much hampered by U.S. reluctance to authorize or provide the necessary resources. In December, the Bush administration finally agreed to support a resolution providing an extra 3,000 troops to bolster the UN mission’s existing 5,700, but then insisted that the new deployment be split. This means that at best a battalion of Bangladeshi soldiers will reach Bunia by October, by which time tens of thousands of people may be dead.

Nothing much moves these days without Washington’s support, and if the Bush administration does not alter its attitude to this crisis it runs the risk of being seen as just as indifferent as the Clinton administration was to Rwanda in 1994. Breast-beating after the event is no substitute for effective action before it. The UN mission’s own performance has been less than impressive and it has to lift its game, fast. While its mandate is minimal - to monitor the cease-fire and voluntary disarmament - and its troop numbers have always been inadequate, it has often seemed more preoccupied with protecting its own personnel than helping protect Congolese civilians to the extent it has been capable. The UN mission has repatriated only a few hundred Rwandan fighters out of the 15,000-20,000 in eastern Congo. Last March it completely failed to report the redeployment of unofficial Rwandan forces into North and South Kivu, the other cauldron of continuing Congo violence.

This time there must be no shirking of responsibility by the United Nations, Washington and the rest of the international community. Diplomatic pressure by itself seems unlikely to bring the situation in Ituri under any kind of control. The Security Council must immediately endorse the deployment of a multinational force to Ituri, fully empowered under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, to stabilize the situation, remaining there until UN forces take over the mission in a few months time. France has indicated it is willing to send troops if others join it. That is very welcome, but there will have to be movement in days or weeks, not months, and in adequate numbers - at least a brigade, around 3,000 troops, is required. The warning bells have been rung about Ituri, and no one can say they haven’t been heard. Words of public indignation are not enough. The world must prove that it can do better than stand by and watch as another genocide unfolds.

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The world must prove that it can do better than stand by and watch as another genocide unfolds.
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i loathe being a pessimist, but - how many times have we stated this and watched as it is repeatedly ignored? (And i include each and every country in this, not singling any one out in particular). i fear it is just not news, whether it's 3 Africans or 3 million. We've all become desensitized........ the fact that 3 million individuals in Congo have already lost their lives due to the civil war, is just not "news enough".

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The world must prove that it can do better than stand by and watch as another genocide unfolds.
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If you ask me we are not standing idle while watching.. we are simply standing idle. No one watches. How many times do these reports come out - the single incidents and the reports summarizing the huge statistics?? How long do they stay out?? They are gone as soon as they come.

No human can "stand by and watch as another genocide unfolds". If their eyes were open they would be forced to do something. But then again: "A single death is a tragedy. A million deaths is a statistic." Stalin said that.

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Originally posted by spoon: *
*
"A single death is a tragedy. A million deaths is a statistic." Stalin said that.
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**

Not certain what's more shocking - Stalin's inhuman and callous statement, or the fact that it actually speaks the truth.

They commit the murders.
We let them.

Which is the greater sin?

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*Originally posted by spoon: *
**They commit the murders.
We let them.

Which is the greater sin?
[/QUOTE]
**

God, uncomfortable question:( which pretty much proves that we are.

Like it or not, except for the 'Fundamentalist' and 'Islamic' North and the 'Diamond Rich' South, the rest of Africa has never been of any importance to anybody. I bet nobody of us would even be able to locate any other African nation in the map, nor would we be aware of it's capital cities, leave alone it's history and circumstances. So, who bothers, who kills and who gets killed out there in that 'Dark Continent'.

May sound very crude and racist - YES the world is RACIST at large.

Suhaib

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*Originally posted by Nadia_H: *

i loathe being a pessimist, but - how many times have we stated this and watched as it is repeatedly ignored? (And i include each and every country in this, not singling any one out in particular). i fear it is just not news, whether it's 3 Africans or 3 million. We've all become desensitized........ the fact that 3 million individuals in Congo have already lost their lives due to the civil war, is just not "news enough".
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You could be right. How many of us were aware that 3 million people have been killed in DR Congo in recent years - arguably the biggest numbers of killings in a war for decades? This is the chance for the entire international community to unite and show their people's that they can act together regardless of political wrangling and "national" self interest to help millions in Africa.

mallik look what happened to un peace keepers. if they dont want
to stop fighting nobody can help.

‘Savage killing’ of UN observers

Is there much Oil in Africa?

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*Originally posted by Gupta: *
Is there much Oil in Africa?
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Nigeria and Angola has plenty oil...then there is Libia as well.

As sad as that incident is, it is no excuse to just sit by and allow another genocide to occur.

Malik why don't you join some volunteer program and help out, they could use some extra hands.

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*Originally posted by Malik73: *

As sad as that incident is, it is no excuse to just sit by and allow another genocide to occur.
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what the sourrouding african countries are doing? cant they put toghether peace keeping force?

[QUOTE]
Originally posted by Malik73: *
**This is the chance for the entire international community to unite and show their people's that they can act together regardless of political wrangling and "national" self interest to help millions in Africa.
[/QUOTE]
*

...Indeed.

Most of them are either involved in civil conflicts of their own or have proxy armies in DR Congo contributing to the bloodshed in the country.

But it’s good to see France taking a lead in scoping out the possibilty of an international force for DR Congo. A French military team in the north east looks at how a multinational force could halt ethnic killings.](BBC NEWS | Africa | Deaths rise in DR Congo)

P.S. utd, we could all join volunteer programs to help the suffering, but we are powerless to stop any genocide happening. Only the governments of the world can unite to avert that tragedy.

Don’t know how many people missed the stories of cannibalism in the Congo.

When you read stuff like this, it makes you wonder how the UN or anyone else is supposed to alleviate problems in parts of the world where the form of atrocities are so horrid that civilized people cannot even fathom them.


UN condemns DR Congo cannibalism

Uganda helped establish the MLC rebels

The United Nations Security Council has strongly condemned massacres and human rights violations, including cannibalism, by rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
A UN investigation said that the Ugandan-backed Movement for the Liberation of Congo (MLC) and two smaller factions committed atrocities between October and December in the eastern Ituri province.

More than 350 witnesses and victims interviewed by the UN confirmed earlier allegations that the MLC was responsible for rape, torture, executions and cannibalism near the town of Beni.

** In one case, investigators heard how a young girl was cut into small pieces by the soldiers and then eaten.

Other examples include hearts and other organs being cut out of victims and forced on their families to eat.
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A senior Congolese Government official told the BBC that the massacres demonstrated the need for a more robust UN presence in the region.

‘Freaks’

The rights investigators heard that the soldiers systematically raped women and looted houses in the town of Mambasa and in villages along the road towards Beni.

Members of the minority Pygmy community, forced to flee their forest homes for the first time anyone can remember, were among those targeted.

The Pygmies say they have been targeted by the violence

The UN spokesperson in Kinshasa described the rebel soldiers as “freaks” who were out of control and said that abusers of human rights, wherever they were in Congo, should be brought to justice.

She said a copy of the investigators’ findings had been given to the UN Security Council.

The BBC’s Mark Dummett in Kinshasa says that, in spite of recent advances in Congo’s peace process, there is still insecurity in much of the country, particularly the north-east, where the rape and massacre of civilians have become commonplace.

‘Failed state’

The Congolese Information Minister, Kikaya Bin Karubi, urged the UN to consider strengthening its observer mission, MONUC, and give it a peace enforcement status.

** "Today you may deploy even more MONUC troops in the Ituri province, they will go there, and as an observer mission they will be observing people eating people.

“They will be observing cannibalism because their mandate does not allow them to intervene or to do something about it.” **

But the BBC’s Greg Barrow at the UN headquarters in New York says Security Council members remain reluctant to support a more robust UN military presence.

Our correspondent says the UN does not want to find itself playing the role of a proxy army, providing security for a failed state that controls the capital Kinshasa, but has little power outside.

French troops take first steps in war-torn Congo, James Astill
The Guardian, 9 June 2003

To the echo of gunfire, French troops began patrolling Bunia, the north-eastern capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, yesterday, leading the first joint-European military intervention in the most violent theatre of Congo’s war.

Some 50 French soldiers padded through the suburbs, deserted and smoking after a battle between the rival Hema and Lendu tribes on Saturday.

The patrols followed a show of French strength late on Saturday, when an advance guard of 100 special forces occupied Bunia’s main road for an hour, sparking an angry confrontation with the incumbent Hema militia, the Union of Congolese Patriots.

“It was an important gesture,” said the colonel commanding the French force, who asked not to be named. "I wanted them to know that we control this route, and we will use it as and when we want.

“Today was different. I told my men to be less aggressive, to keep their guns lowered…Our mandate is very clear: it tells us to protect civilians and to respond to any aggression with the appropriate force.”

That mandate appears unlikely to end the war in Bunia, which has claimed 50,000 lives so far, and is only one of a dozen micro-conflicts raging in eastern Congo, stirred by four years of anarchic occupation by Rwandan and Ugandan forces.

As fighting raged around the main UN compound on Saturday, grenades and bullets swept over the heads of several thousand refugees. At least three people were injured, yet the French troops remained at their barracks, two miles away.

Their mandate, the colonel said, did not allow him to intervene. “If civilians are being massacred, we have to stop it. But if there are just a few civilians killed in fighting between armed groups, that’s not our job.”

The French troops arrived in Bunia on Friday to secure the town’s decrepit airport in advance of a 1,400-strong European force sent to pacify the area in preparation for the arrival of Bangladeshi UN peacekeepers in September.

The French soldiers are not allowed to reveal their names or regiment, but their accents - including one trooper’s thick Scottish brogue - suggested they include many from the Foreign Legion.

It remained uncertain yesterday when the main force will arrive, or which European countries would contribute. Britain, Sweden, Norway, Belgium and Germany all expressed an interest after a massacre last month exposed the way Bunia’s existing 700 Uruguayan peacekeepers were outnumbered.

Five British military planners reconnoitred Bunia on Friday, but it is not known what role any UK troops would play.

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*Originally posted by Malik73: *

You could be right. How many of us were aware that 3 million people have been killed in DR Congo in recent years - arguably the biggest numbers of killings in a war for decades? This is the chance for the entire international community to unite and show their people's that they can act together regardless of political wrangling and "national" self interest to help millions in Africa.
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THE STORY OF AFRICA is a sad story of rich and poor
its what happens in every day life of rich man not bothering about the poor neighbour and while a rich man dies no matter how cruel and inhuman that man used to be there is a large turn out to his funeral and no matter how pious and helpfull the poor man is nobody is bothered of his living or dead
what happened in rwanda was horrific far worse than what happened to the jews in nazi concentration camps. heart shudders and eyes cry when you hear stories of what happened in those days in rwanda. but how many people here remember that there was a french complicity in the genocide? how many people remember that the genocide was planned long ago and that the assasination of the hutu president was done by some white men who shot the plane down with shoulder firing missile?
africa has been used as a battle ground for white man just as afghanistan was. how many of you remember that in angola there was A REBEL LEADER CALLED jonas savimbi who was armed by usa and allies during the cold war and the socailist govt was backed by russia during the cold war. usa also supplied stringers to the rebels and the rebels massacared so many innocents?
look here the bottom line is its the white man or the rich man who makes rules and the world follows its as long as the a dacoit is working in the rich mans interest he is a hero a rebel and as soon as he does something else he is declared a terrorist.
very few people have the intelligence and the capacity to understand this basic fact