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A Call to Conscience
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"We are not alone. Africa, Asia,
and free and
liberated people from every corner of the world will
always be found at the side of the
Congolese."
Patrice Emery Lumumba
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This
past week people around the world commemorated the birthday
(January 15, 1929) of Martin Luther King, Jr., and reflected
on the
life and significance of Patrice Emery Lumumba, another
slain hero who fought for justice and human rights in the tumultuous
1960s. Lumumba was the first elected Prime Minister of the Congo.
To the sorrow of the Congolese and freedom loving people throughout
the globe, he was removed from his elected office only months
after ascending to power on June 30, 1960. He was assassinated
on January 17, 1961, in a collaborative effort; primarily by
Belgium,
the
United States and their Congolese agents such as Joseph Desire Mobutu and
Moise Tshombe.
After decades of a brutal dictatorship and resource
wars, the Congolese held its first “democratic”
elections in 46 years in July and October 2006 and
elected a new President and Parliament.
Unfortunately, an election does not equate to
independence, especially one funded “to the tune of”
$500 million by the same forces responsible for the
assassination of Lumumba; the subsequent
installation and maintenance in power of Mobutu for
over three decades; and whose multi-national
corporations pillaged the Congo during the recent
conflict where Congo lost over 4 million of its
population. Surely, the foreign powers that invested
a half-billion dollars in the elections will be looking for
a considerable return on their investment. The
election of Joseph Kabila as president is the down
payment on their return. Of all the political
candidates, he was the most amenable to
maintaining the exploitative mineral contracts that
are currently in place. The Pole Institute speaking of
the exploitation of Congo’s wealth notes that the
response from the international community is simply
to legalize existing structures of resource
exploitation. The POLE
Institute adds that "many
of the people who illegally exploited natural resources
in different regions of the DRC are now part of the
government, the same processes of exploitation have
become legal.”
In spite of the long-time Lumumbist and Deputy Prime
Minister under Lumumba, Antoine Gizenga being
appointed as Prime Minister, the forces arrayed
against him inside and outside of the Congo will
surely prevent him from fulfilling Lumumba’s wishes.
Lumumba stated in his 1960 inaugural speech
“We
are going to keep watch over the lands of our
country so that they truly profit her children.”
Should
the existing contracts signed by the current crop of
Congolese leaders remain intact, Congo’s children will
have to wait for at least another generation before
they “truly profit” from their country’s
wealth. In
Global Witness’ 2005 report "Digging in
Corruption,” it
notes that the deals signed with foreign corporations
are so “one-sided” that they “provide
huge benefits
to the private companies involved but leave
Gecamines (Congolese state-owned mining company)
with such a low share that the state will be unable
to generate profits from the deals.” In fact, the
report goes on to say “the majority of the
contracts
signed left the Congo with only a 25% share and in
some cases significantly lower.” In addition,
these
lopsided contracts have been signed for 30 to 40
years.
Some of the most egregious foreign interests
profiting at the expense of not only the current
generation of Congolese but future generations
are:
George
Forrest
Dan Gertler and Benny
Steinmetz/Global Enterprises
Company/Nikanor
Anvil Mining
Phelps
Dodge
Chemaf
KinRoss-
Forrest/Katanga
Mining
First Quantum/Adastra
Metorex
See page 37 of "Digging in
Corruption” for more
details of deals established by some of the above
mentioned companies.
Multilateral institutions such as the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank will offer no
reprieve to the Congo, as they have been equally
culpable in facilitating the exploitation of the riches
of the Congo. In the November 26, 2006 Financial
Times article by Dino Mahtani entitled “World Bank
faces questions over Congo mining contracts”, it
is
reported that the bank ran the risk of "perceived
complicity and/or tacit approval" of mining deals
signed with a "complete lack of
transparency." These
deals are worth billions of dollars and account for 75
percent of Gecamines assets, which contain some of
the world’s richest deposits of copper. After decades
of working with the IMF and World Bank during the
Mobutu era, the Congo was saddled with a $14 billion
debt; currently at $10 billion. If these institutions
were not complicit in the kleptocratic practices of
Mobutu they were at the very least grossly
negligent. These institutions’ own reports illustrate
that their track record produces more
impoverishment than empowerment. Yet they are
still proffered as part of the solution to the Congo’s
woes. The best that the Congo can hope for when
dealing with these institutions is continued
indebtedness and the acceleration of the selling off
of the country’s assets under the guise of
privatization.
No fundamental change has taken place in the Congo
since Lumumba’s slaying and none will occur until the
Congolese people truly control their resources and
freely utilize them for their own benefit and that of
Africa at-large.
Lumumba said in his last letter to his wife “I
know,
and feel in my heart, that sooner or later my people
will shake off all enemies, inside and outside our land,
and they will rise as one man to say "no" to the
shame and degradation of colonialism and to assume
once again their dignity under clear
skies.”
We encourage all people of goodwill to work with the
Congolese people to stave off the legalization of the
looting of their resources and the impoverishment of
yet another generation. Nothing short of the
independence and the dignity called for by Lumumba
will do.
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Scholarship Fund and the Lumumba Monument
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Friends of the Congo
Voice:
202-584-6512
The Friends of the Congo (FOTC) is a collaborative
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