09/18/2024
Bob Marley Interview with Earl Chin from (Rockers TV)/Cut version - September 2, 1980
It's almost the end of 2022. Because I have future plans in 2023 and will work on upcoming projects for the Reggae community and Bob's legacy. I do this sinc...
08/18/2024
Salif Keita live at North Sea Jazz 2023. Full concert
Keita's album La Différence was produced around the end of 2009. The work is dedicated to the struggles of the world's albino community (victims of human sac...
08/18/2024
Salif Keita "Africa"
Afropop legend Salif Keita performed with his band at The Sanctuary for Independent Media in Troy NY on April 2, 2017 to a capacity crowd in an amazing show!...
06/03/2022
https://youtu.be/IXUFiXeNZV4
The Most Intense Heartfelt Description Of Racism I Ever Filmed
As my subscribers know, I have done thousands of interviews in my life. This interview with journalist, civil rights advocate, lawyer Roger Wilkins was one t...
06/03/2022
SEVEN FACTS ABOUT GENOCIDE IN THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO
facts about genocide in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has experienced ongoing violence since the mid-1990s. Although the DRC has the potential to be one of the richest countries in the world with its vast resources, parties and rebels in the DRC are taking and profiting from the resources and committing mass murder in the process. These are seven facts about genocide in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Facts About Genocide in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Many believe the genocide committed by the DRC is a result of and closely connected to the conflict in Rwanda in 1994. Fighting still continues today on the Rwanda-DRC border, caused by the persecution of Rwandan Hutu refugees who fled to the DRC. A human rights activist from the border city of Goma told the BBC, “People don’t talk about it enough… but the Rwandan genocide was like flicking over the first domino.”
The main participants in the genocide and violence in the DRC include the national army, the Armed Forces of the DRC and diverse groups of rebels throughout the country, including the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda and Mayi-Mayi militias.
The atrocities of the genocide not only include mass murders, but also abductions, r**e, child labor and the displacement of persons. The DRC has been involved in the conflict since 1996, which is estimated to be the cause of more than six million deaths. Because of widespread violence, more than three million people have been forced to leave their homes and many continue to go without humanitarian assistance.
Many of the six million deaths have been indirect consequences of the war. Diseases such as malnutrition and malaria have run rampant due to the country’s political instability and lack of infrastructure.
The violence is far from over. In August 2017, the U.N. reported that in the DRC’s Kasai province, an estimated 2,000 people have been murdered due to ethnicity-based violence and that several mass graves have since been discovered in the area.
Since December 2017, more than 34 villages have been ransacked by Lendu militiamen, who have killed many, including women and children, while also leaving many Hema people homeless. The DRC government has since decided not to intervene. However, the U.N. did warn the government months beforehand about a potential ethnic conflict that could lead to the deaths of many.
There have since been efforts and intervention to address DRC’s genocide. In 1999, the U.N. created the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO) in order to protect civilians and transform the country. In 2013, the U.N. extended MONUSCO further, making it first U.N. mission to include offensive action to strengthen the peacekeeping operation. The U.N.’s intervention brigade has since helped defeat the M23 rebels and continues to extend its mandate to stop other rebel groups.
These facts about genocide in the Democratic Republic of the Congo are only a portion of the complex situation in the DRC. With the country’s weak governance and many rebel groups, the DRC’s people have been constrained by too many years of violence and conflict. Nevertheless, by putting a stop to corruption, human rights violations and rebel groups through continued international efforts, the DRC has the potential to be a rich and prosperous country.
– Emma Martin
Photo: Flickr
06/03/2022
Genocide in Congo! Africans must act now before it is too late. They are plundering our resources! No one is talking!
05/30/2022
https://youtu.be/f8woRAyGUJ0
Africa Unite - Bob Marley (LYRICS/LETRA) (Reggae)
TAGS: bob marley africa unite, bob marley africa unite, bob marley live,, bob marle,y bob marley reggae, bob marley peac,e bob marley sleeping music, bob mar...