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Members
of Congress blast U.S. and UN for roles in destabilizing Africa
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by Eric Ture Muhammad
Staff Writer
WASHINGTON�Corporate greed, combined with a desire to never
allow the "throne of civilization" to unite and become
self-sufficient, continues to join at the hip the U.S. Government, the
United Nations and corporate cartels in a persistent war on Africa, a
recent congressional hearing concluded.
Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D-Ga.) chaired the hearing, "Covert
Action in Africa: A Smoking Gun in Washington, D.C.," and led the
voices of castigation that claimed the U.S. Government, the UN, private
militias and western economic interests possessed complete knowledge of
pending civil unrest in Africa and fed the fray between African nations.
Their aim was to use war, disease, hunger and poverty as covers while
continuing the centuries-old practice of rape and exploitation of the
continent�s human and mineral resources, testimonies charged.
Among those named as collaborators during the daylong hearing were
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, former U.S. President Bill Clinton,
former Secretary of State Madeline K. Albright and international diamond
merchant Maurice Tempelsman.
Mr. Tempelsman, whose role in the confluence of public policy and
private profit as a middleman for the De Beers diamond cartel, according
to submitted evidence, helped to shape practically every major covert
action in Africa since the early 1950s. Declassified memos and cables
between former U.S. presidents and State Department officials over the
last four decades named Mr. Tempelsman with direct input in the
destabilization of Congo, Sierra Leone, Angola, Zimbabwe, Namibia,
Rwanda and Ghana.
He earned his stripes with western powers in the overthrow of Ghana�s
first elected president, Kwame Nkrumah, and the CIA-backed assassination
of Congo�s first-elected president, Patrice Lumumba, documents reveal.
As late as 1997, Mr. Tempelsman was named in the ongoing cover-up of
U.S.-CIA covert support of the former president of Zaire (now the
Democratic Republic of the Congo [DRC]), Mobuto Sese Seko, who died in
exile in 1997 after the overthrow of his regime by recently assassinated
Congolese President Laurent Kabila. Mr. Tempelsman is named as the agent
in charge of selling off the gross excess of the strategic diamond
stockpile in the United States that was used to fund the deceased
dictator�s exploits. According to documents entered into evidence, Mr.
Tempelsman was rumored in 1998 to have engaged in a romantic
relationship with then-Secretary of State Albright.
During the hearing, Ms. McKinney said the legacy of former Pres.
Clinton and his foreign policy toward Africa is one of grave deceit. She
charged that not only did his administration turn a deaf ear to the
genocide that occurred in Rwanda under his watch, but that everyone who
aided in the silencing were rewarded with promotions.
"Look at Madeline Albright. At the time U.N. Ambassador, she got
promoted to secretary of state," she charged. "Susan Rice,
over at the National Security Council, she got promoted to assistant
secretary of state for Africa. Kofi Annan, whom The Carlsson Report [a
United Nations inquiry] makes 19 observations, of which 17 blame Kofi
Annan, and yet [he] gets a promotion to secretary-general and is about
to be re-elected as secretary-general."
Rep. McKinney also blasted International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
(ICTR) Judge Louise Arbor, who, shortly after suspending the
investigation of the April 1994 rocket attack on the presidential plane
that killed Presidents Juvenal Habyarimana of Rwanda and Cyprien
Ntaryamira of Burundi, was awarded a Canada Supreme Court appointment.
"America�s policy toward Africa during the past decade, rather
than seeking to stabilize situations where civil war and ethnic turmoil
reign supreme, has seemingly promoted destabilization," testified
Wayne Madsen, author of "Genocide and Covert Activities in
Africa 1993-1999."
Ms. Albright was fond of describing as "beacons of hope"
those pro-U.S. military leaders in Africa who assumed power by force,
Mr. Madsen said. "These leaders, who include the current presidents
of Uganda, Rwanda, Ethiopia, Angola, Eritrea, Burundi and the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC), preside over countries where ethnic and
civil turmoil permit unscrupulous international mining companies to take
advantage of the strife to fill their own coffers with conflict
diamonds, gold, copper, platinum and other precious minerals�including
one that is a primary component of computer microchips," he said.
Mr. Madsen said the United States played more of a role in the
Rwandan tragedy than it admits, citing the U.S.-backed Rwandan and
Ugandan-led invasions of Congo. Speculation behind the recent
assassination of Pres. Laurent Kabila and the rapid visit to the United
States by his successor and son Joseph Kabila�at the same time as a
visit by Rwandan President Paul Kagame, coupled with meetings with
Corporate Council for Africa and a lavish dinner-reception thrown by
Maurice Tempelsman�has done little to put America in a favorable light
in the region, the author asserts.
"After all, the date of Kabila�s assassination [Jan. 16, 2001]
was practically 40 years from the very day of the
CIA-planned-and-executed assassination of Congolese leader Patrice
Lumumba," he concluded.
When policy and profit converge
"This is a western syndicated proxy war and, like Sierra Leone,
Angola and Sudan, it is war-as-cover for the rapid and unrestricted
extraction of raw materials, and war as a means to totally
disenfranchise the local people," said Keith Snow, freelance writer
and journalist who supplied investigative reports for the panel.
Diamonds, gold, cobalt, manganese, petroleum, natural gas, timber and
possibly uranium, he said, are just a few of the major spoils being
pillaged behind the scenes as war destroys Africa. "Some of these
minerals are almost solely found in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo," Mr. Snow said.
One of those minerals, columbium tantalite, or "Col-Tan",
is a primary example of the role strategic minerals play in sustaining
war. This scarce mineral is found almost exclusively in Eastern Congo
and used by western nations in everything from aircraft engines to
computer chips.
"Economic interests are a significant factor in the fighting in
the DRC," said Bill Hartung, of the World Policy Institute in New
York. In his co-authored report "Deadly Legacy Update: U.S. Arms
and Training Programs in Africa," the researcher acknowledged
the significant role economic interests play in the fighting in the DRC
and throughout Africa.
"Africans need western technology, investment and cooperation to
transfer minerals. Africans do not process these minerals; they are
processed in the west. Africans are not dependent upon minerals used in
high-tech industry, sophisticated defense projects, or materials used in
space exploration. The west, and particularly the United States, is
dependent upon the availability of strategic minerals, many of which the
U.S. does not produce. Africa does not have a vibrant market for
diamonds, which are cut and distributed in the west," he said.
Western corporations are aware that revenues from mineral
exploitation received by African countries involved in war are used to
purchase military equipment. Considering the history of a strong
U.S.-led corporate presence in Africa, it is quite likely that U.S.
mining interests have benefited from the war, concluded the panel.
This may also explain the interest of American Mineral Fields
International (AMF), which, according to Mr. Snow, is a classic case of
cronyism. The company secured a $1 billion mining deal for cobalt and
copper before Laurent Kabila came into power. According to Mr. Snow, the
deal was secured through a shared interest�namely Pres. Clinton. AMF�s
chairman at the time of the deal was Mike McMurrough, a native of Mr.
Clinton�s hometown of Hope, Arkansas. Mr. Snow also alleged that Mr.
Clinton has financial interest in AMF. Former Pres. George Bush Sr. was
also cited at the hearing for his advisory board membership at Barrick
Gold, Ltd., for which he used his connections with the CIA, having once
been director of the spy agency.
The UN�s failure
The Carlsson Report, released one year ago, is an independent inquiry
into the UN�s actions during the 1994 Rwanda genocide presented to the
UN Security Council by the report�s chairman Ingvar Carlsson. The
report condemns the Security Council for not preventing the systematic
slaughter of over 800,000 men, women and children in Rwanda, which
occurred within a 100-day period between the months of April and July of
1994. The UN�s decision to reduce the strength of the mandated United
Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda (UNAMIR) after the genocide
started, despite its knowledge of the atrocities was the cause of much
bitterness stated his report.
"The failure by the United Nations to prevent and, subsequently,
to stop the genocide in Rwanda was a failure by the United Nations
system as a whole," said the report. "There was a persistent
lack of political will by Member States to act, or to act with enough
assertiveness. This lack of political will affected the response by the
Secretariat and decision-making by the Security Council, but was also
evident in the recurrent difficulties to get the necessary troops for
the UNAMIR. Finally, although UNAMIR suffered from a chronic lack of
resources and political priority, it must also be said that serious
mistakes were made with those resources which were at the disposal of
the United Nations," Mr. Carlsson said.
A similar report released by the Organization of African Unity (OAU)
last July also singled out France, Belgium, the Roman Catholic and
Anglican churches along with the United States and UN as those most
guilty and demanded "a significant level of reparations" be
paid.
According to Mr. Carlsson, Mr. Annan as Under Secretary General was
made privy to a Jan. 11, 1994 cable which leaked information concerning
a plot hatched by the Interahamwe militia to kill Belgian soldiers,
force the withdrawal of Belgian troops and dispatch Rwandan Patriotic
Front (RPF) soldiers, who were Tutsi by ethnicity, to Kigali camps
"for their extermination." The informant said that his
personnel were able to kill up to 1,000 Tutsi soldiers in 20-minute
intervals and that a cache of weapons with at least 135 G3 and AK 47
assault rifles were at their disposal.
"He was prepared to show UNAMIR where these weapons were located
in exchange for his family�s protection," said the report.
The report said Mr. Annan wrote a letter to then-UN Secretary-General
Boutros Boutrous-Ghali�s special representative in Rwanda, stating
that the information contained in the cable was cause for concern, but
insisted the information be handled with caution. The original cable was
filed into archives and Mr. Boutrous-Ghali said that he was not shown a
copy of the cable until much later. Several such communications, the
report alleges, were similarly ignored.
"The Secretary-General responded to the Carlsson Report by
saying that he received it with deep regret and agreed with the report�s
findings," said Fahran Haqq, a spokesman for Mr. Annan at UN
headquarters in New York.
On Apr. 6, 1994 Presidents Habyarimana and Ntaryamira flew back
together from a reportedly successful sub-regional peace summit where,
according to Tanzanian officials present, Pres. Habyarimana had
committed his country to implement the Arusha Agreement, a UN peace
accord. At approximately 8:30 p.m., the plane was destroyed by rocket
fire as it approached its landing at Kigali�s airport. Everybody
onboard died, thus officially unleashing the civil war that engulfs the
Great Lakes Region today.
Mr. Haqq denied comment on Ms. McKinney�s allegation of UN
collusion and told The Final Call that, since Mr. Carlsson�s
report, Mr. Annan has been the greatest voice behind the UN�s Brahimi
Report, a wide-ranging, seven-part resolution containing recommendations
and decisions on peacekeeping missions, which must be the responsibility
of the Secretary-General. Further, it urges prospective parties to peace
agreements, including regional and sub-regional organizations, to
cooperate fully with the United Nations from an early stage in
negotiations. It mandates the Secretariat to continue comprehensive
political briefings on relevant issues before the Security Council and
requests regular military briefings from the Secretariat, including by
the military adviser, the force commander or designate, before the
establishment of a peacekeeping operation.
What should Africa expect from Mr. Bush?
No one during the hearing expressed any optimism that things will
fare better under a Bush Administration. Mr. Bush did state during his
campaign that Africa was not a major area of national security interest
to the United States; his key advisors have suggested otherwise.
Secretary of State Colin Powell has expressed interest in Africa but
has not defined in any detail what those interests are outside of
resolving the conflict in the Sudan.
The new threat to development in Africa has become recent decisions
by Pres. Bush to appoint Walter H. Kansteiner III as assistant secretary
of state for Africa. He has expressed desire to draw new territorial
boundaries on the continent. Also still in the works are the enactment
of the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act that was passed into law before
the expiration of Pres. Clinton�s term and the Zimbabwe Democracy Act
2000, a sanction measure against the rights of Black Zimbabweans�
claims to land ownership in their own country. That bill is currently
engrossed in Senate debate.
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