| |
For Immediate Release
Contact:
Carrie Crawford
202-584-6512
info@friendsofthecongo.org
What Should President Bush Say About the Congo During
His Trip to Africa?
Washington, DC - February 15, 2008 - As president George
Bush travels to Africa, the world's attention will be focused
on the countries that he visits; Rwanda is one of those countries.
Rwanda and its leader Paul Kagame are deeply implicated in
what the United Nations say is the deadliest conflict since
World War Two. Rwanda's and Uganda's 1996 and 1998 invasions
of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which were backed
and supported by the United States and other western powers
unleashed untold human misery and suffering.
According to the International Rescue Committee, 5.4 million
Congolese have died, 50 percent of which are children five
years old or younger. Amnesty International has reported that
tens of thousands of women have been raped, some victims as
young as 2 years old and as old as 70 years. Medecins Sans
Frontières (MSF) says the Congo conflict is one of
the ten most underreported stories of 2007. In those fleeting
moments when the conflict is reported, it is done without
context and often presented as wanton killing by Africans
perpetually doomed to committing insane acts of violence and
atrocities without any mention of what fuels the conflict.
American, Canadian, and European corporations' pilfering
of Congo's natural resources is inextricably linked to the
heinous rapes and appalling deaths. Antonio Guterres, United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees reminded the world
in his January 2008 interview with the Financial Times of
London that "The international community has systematically
looted the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and we should
not forget that."
A myriad of reports since 2001 has documented the pillaging
of the Congo by neighboring countries and western corporations
and its role in fueling the conflict in the Congo. To the
chagrin of many human rights groups and people of conscience
throughout the globe, western nations have refused to hold
their corporations accountable and put the necessary pressure
on their client states of Rwanda and Uganda to keep their
hands off the Congo.
Congo's gold, diamonds, copper, cobalt, coltan, tin, chromium,
germanium, nickel, and uranium are central to the functioning
of many modern amenities such as cell phones, computers, electronic
devices, our children's video game consoles, kitchen appliances,
automobiles, airplanes, and numerous other devices. Its rainforest,
often called the World's second lung, is central to the world's
battle against climate change. Undoubtedly we in the West
are indirectly benefiting from the pilfering and the widespread
killing in the Congo.
President Bush has an opportunity to say and do a number
of things that can make a positive difference in the Congo
and the Great Lakes region of Africa.
1. Demand that Paul Kagame, a former Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
military student, immediately cease his interference in the
Congo.
2. Pressure Paul Kagame to open up democratic space in Rwanda
and provide a path for the Hutu's in the Congo to return to
Rwanda.
3. Call for a process of national reconciliation and justice
throughout the entire Congo, not just in the east. Such reconciliation
should institute a process where the victims of human rights
abuses and atrocities are able to secure justice.
4. Call for U.S. and other western corporations who are poised
to make spectacular profits in the midst of the rapes and
killings to cease their pilfering of the Congo.
5. Declare that the natural wealth of the Congo belongs to
and should benefit first and foremost the people of the Congo
and not solely foreign multi-nationals.
|