Saturday, December 15, 2012

PEACEKEEPING OPERATIONS & FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOR DUMMIES


Imagine telling the cops to walk their beats and not to intervene as long as the criminals do not endanger people's lives. This equates to giving the green light or carte blanche to criminals to commit all types of crimes and walk free as long as they do not cause any wound to the civilian population. It is like telling them that they can steal, loot, enslave, rape, and do all unimaginable atrocities provided they do not cause any wound to their victims! Unfortunately, this has been the mandate the United Nations gave to its largest mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo! In the DRC, those criminals are the Rwanda-and-Uganda backed rebels whose atrocities have been well documented and publicized enough in recent months throughout the world.

As a criminologist and law enforcement expert, I strongly believe that any United Nations military or paramilitary force must be tasked with enforcing international law through the use of all tools to force belligerent groups to comply with civilized codes of conduct. Therefore, I urge the United Nations to strengthen its 19,000 troops in the Congo so that they can respond with fire any time criminals in uniform, also known as rebels and their foreign backers, violate decent norms of conduct.

On the other hand, the most perverse idea that has been floating in the international community in recent months is that Congolese have the obligation to share their natural resources with their neighbors. In other words, they sustain that the governments of Rwanda and Uganda have to loot Congo’s resources because these two countries are so poor that they rely on international donors to pay their own government employees. This is what we call “neutralization” in criminology. Criminals use neutralization techniques all the time. They tend to justify or rationalize why they steal or commit any crime. I strongly believe that Congolese are intelligent enough to reject any form of justification of predatory lootings of Congo’s natural resources by Rwanda and Uganda during the last 15 years. The truth is that no country in the world has to be forced to accept to be looted, period. It is stupid to camouflage the looting of Congo's resources by calling it "sharing" this time!

Foreign investment will always be welcome in the Congo and we will make it paramount as we get rid of our own dictatorship. Congolese must beware of those “mega investment projects or ideas” for the entire Great Lakes region. Their only purpose is to legalize the looting of Congo’s natural resources. It is sad that some individuals in the world want to replace the term “looting” by “sharing”. Neutralization techniques at work!



UPDATE: The United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon decided, four days after this post was published, that the U.N. peacekeeping mission in the DRC  must be beefed up and that Tanzania, a key transit point for looted goods from the Congo, must be involved. I'm glad the message went through. FOLLOW LINK BELOW for Ban Ki-moon comments:




WE THOUGHT YOU WERE ALREADY DEAD!


There I was telling those encounters in a taxi cab that I was a human right activist and a democracy advocate early in the 1980s against one of the worst dictatorships in the DRC. They recognized me and told me they thought I was already assassinated by the former Zaire's dictator.  The fight must continue until tyranny is wiped out of the African continent, starting with East Africa and Central Africa.

(Part 2)






MY FIGHT AGAINST AFRICAN DICTATORS: AN ENCOUNTER WITH TWO WITNESSES


My fight against African dictators is not new. It spreads over a period of 30 years. I've opposed dictators Mobutu, Kabila, Kagame, Museveni, etc. The following two videos were shot on a 2008 trip to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (former Zaire). They contain a testimony of those who had the privilege to witness my fight against tyranny in the early 1980s.

(Part 1)