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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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July 10, 2006 - London based Global
Witness
recently published a scathing report entitled
Digging
in Corruption: Fraud, Abuse and
Exploitation in Katanga's Copper and Cobalt
Mines.
The report documents the corruption, abuse and rank
exploitation taking place in the formal and informal
mining sectors in Congo's Katanga province (one
of the
world's richest copper and cobalt producing areas).
The report is yet another lucid documentation of the
pilfering of the Congo's wealth. The United Nation's
four reports from 2001 – 2003, reports by Human
Rights Watch, Fatal Transactions reports,
independent journalist Keith Harmon Snow's work and the
Congolese parliament's Lutundula Commission Report all
clearly identify the link between corrupt Congolese
officials and foreign mining companies, mainly from
Europe, Canada, United States, Australia, South
Africa and of late India and China. Global Witness
says the mining sector in Katanga is characterized
by "widespread corruption and fraud at all levels."
See
the reports section of the FOTC website!
The rapid pace at which the wealth of the Congo is
being sold at below bargain basement prices is
shameless. The rebels, turned so-called politicians,
and multi-national corporations are the primary
beneficiaries of the Congo resource grab. Gerhard
Kemp of the Rand Merchant Bank, of Johannesburg, SA
is quoted in the
Global Witness report (p.34) saying
"The Congo is so rich in mineral wealth, you can't
just ignore it. You don't want to be the last guy at
this party." Without a doubt this is the greatest
land grab party of the modern era.
The South African Mail
and Guardian reported that
there is an international scramble for the wealth of
the Congo and that "billions of dollars will be
made." Juxtaposed to the billions to be made and
the estimated $1 billion that left Katanga province
in 2005, is the unending suffering of the average
Congolese. One Congolese miner interviewed by Global
Witness says "We know that the Congo is rich. But
despite this - we do not even have enough to eat.
Only one category of people profits."
Congolese live
on an average of $100 per year and 80 percent of the
population lives on 30 cents per day. The Congo is a
classic case of modern day serfdom and the depravity
of those seeking to benefit at the expense of others
even if millions more Congolese must die. Surely,
King Leopold II would have a rye smile on his face
knowing that over 100 years later the plunder and
pillage that he began continues uninterrupted with
impunity.
According to Global Witness, the majority of the
contracts signed over the past five years give the
Congo less than 25% share and in some cases,
significantly less. An example of the type of deals
signed is represented by the worlds richest copper
mine, Tenke Fungurume; the foreign companies Phelps
Dodge of Phoenix, Arizona and Tenke Mining
Corp. of
British Columbia, Canada own 82.5%, while the Congo
owns a paltry 17.5% of its own resources through the
parastatal, Gecamines. Many of these contracts are
signed for an entire generation, 30 – 40
years, which
for all intents and purposes condemn a generation of
Congolese to serfdom and poverty, whereby their
resources are plundered to benefit foreign
corporations. In fact, Global Witness reports that
deals signed with Phelps Dodge, Global Enterprises
Corporate Ltd and Kinross-Forrest (Kinross Gold
Corporation of Toronto, Canada and George Forrest
International of Belgium) deliver 70 percent
of the
Congo's known copper reserves to these foreign
corporations.
Should the pilfering continue unchecked, Katanga
province will serve as a precursor of what is to
come for the entire country. The province is under
government control, unlike some of the other eastern
provinces embroiled in conflict, yet the people are
subject to abject poverty and deprivation. While the
world’s eyes are on the upcoming July 30th
elections, the wealth is going out the back door at
warp speed. This reinforces what Congolese say is
the under-belly of the election process whereby the
international community is working feverishly and
spending heavily to legitimize the current client
regime so that the unfettered pilfering of the Congo
can continue (See
interview with Georges
Nzongola-Ntalaja by Pambazuka News).
A window of opportunity exists to break the cycle of
pillage of the Congo's human and natural resources;
a process, which began in its modern form under King
Leopold II of Belgium in 1885, continued under
Belgium Colonialism for a half-century and
perpetuated for over 3 decades by the
Western-imposed and backed dictator Mobutu Sese
Seko.
The underdevelopment and impoverishment of an
entire generation is being carried out while a
perverse alliance between corrupt government
officials and big business line their pockets.
Surely such a proposition is repulsive to any nation
or people who claim to be moral, just or civilized.
No human
rights group or concerned celebrity can claim to be
fighting poverty with any moral veracity and be
silent or ignore the plunder and rape of the Congo.
People of conscience and goodwill can hardly sit
idly and do nothing as another generation of
Congolese is in the process of being condemned to
forced labor, poverty, and mass death.
Friends of the Congo
Voice:
202-584-6512
The Friends of the Congo (FOTC) is a collaborative
effort of people of African ancestry and others of
goodwill who believe that the vast potential of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo can be realized
with strong support from the International
community.
Become a Friend of the Congo and change the future
of Africa and the African world.
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