New York Conference Reviews Congo’s Bloody Calamity Since 1996 Rwanda/Uganda Invasion

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Uganda’s Gen. Museveni — he and Rwanda’s Gen. Kagame launched war of aggression against Congo

[Black Star News Editorial]
 
The 20th anniversary of the invasion of Congo by Rwanda and Uganda and the apocalyptic killings unleashed thereafter will be commemorated with an all-day conference, “Breaking the Silence” in New York City on October 15 at ThoughtWorks located in Manhattan at 99 Madison Ave, New York, NY , 10016. 
 
Twenty years ago today, in 1996, Rwanda and Uganda invaded Congo, which was then known as Zaire. The invasion toppled long-time CIA agent and dictator Mobutu who ran Congo into the ground after he seized power in 1960 from independence hero Patrice Lumumba, who was murdered.
 
Kagame and Museveni installed Laurent Kabila as president. When he tried to exert his independence from his two benefactors Rwanda and Uganda invaded again, this time seeking to topple Kabila and install a pliant puppet.
 
Angola and Zimbabwe intervened and repulsed the invaders who were about to seize Kinshasa, the capital. Rwanda and Uganda ended up occupying mineral rich eastern Congo. That part of the country became the epicenter of: resource plunder; massacres; ethnic displacement; and, mass sexual assaults against women and men so pervasive that Congo became known as the “rape capital of the world.”
 
Kabila was assassinated January 16, 2001 under mysterious circumstances and his son, Joseph Kabila became president.
 
How horrific were the atrocities committed after Rwanda’s and Uganda’s second invasion? 
 
The United Nations conducted a survey of the cites where the alleged retribution killings occurred and issued what is known as the “Mapping Report“; the U.N. concluded that the killings in eastern Congo, primarily by Rwanda’s army, if confirmed by a judicial process, may “constitute crimes of genocide.”
 
Rwanda’s and Uganda’s support for various warring militias including M23 –both countries use the manufactured chaos as cover to steal Congo’s resources– have led to apocalyptic suffering. No one really knows how many Congolese have died; some estimates place the toll at six million. 
 
Congo filed a complaint against Uganda at the International Court of Justice (ICJ); the court in 2005 ruled in Congo’s favor and ordered $10 billion in reparations which Uganda has never paid and Kabila has not attempted to enforce the judgment.
 
The ICC also opened a criminal investigation into alleged crimes by Uganda’s army. On June 8, 2006, The Wall Street Journal reported that Gen. Museveni himself urged then U.N. Secretary General Koffi Anan to block the probe. Museveni evidently feared that he too could be indicted, like Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) leader Joseph Kony or the Sudan’s Omar Hasan al-Bashir. No wonder lately he’s been denouncing the ICC. 
 
Meanwhile Joseph Kabila, who was supposed to step down at the end of this year after completing a second presidential term of office has made it clear he’s not leaving. Recently as many as 50 civilians were reported killed by Kabila’s security forces after they demonstrated against his bid to derail the fragile democracy process by extending his regime.
 
Kabila is following the examples of other regional dictators like Uganda’s Museveni (in power since 1986) and Rwanda’s Kagame (ruler since 1994). 
 
Yet the Congolese, led by the youth have remained defiant and protests against Kabila’s plan to prolong his regime continued even after the bloody suppression.
 
Can the Congolese people eventually free themselves from the shackles of dictatorship and the suffering caused by multiple invasions and by Kabila? What about people in the other East and Central African countries? What can be done about the destructive U.S. role such as its financial and military support for Kagame and Museveni? 
 
These are some of the questions that human rights activists, scholars, journalists and, survivors of the atrocities will address at this coming Saturday’s all-day conference.
 
 
Editor’s Note:  The conference is free and open to the public but RSVPs are required. Food will be served.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
See also  Kushaba Moses Mworeko On Uganda Homophobia

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