Sunday, November 6, 2011
Submitted by annie on Sun, 11/06/2011 - 08:45
01:24
03:29
Download: Rwanda Returns Congolese Minerals.mp3
KPFA Weekend News, 10.05.2011
Transcript:
KPFA Weekend News Host David Rosenberg: Bloomberg reportedthis week that the government of Rwanda is returning 90 tons of minerals seized by the Rwandan Police after they were smuggled into Rwanda from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. A spokesman for the government of Rwanda said that they were returning the minerals to Congo in order to dispense with the longstanding lie that the government has been benefiting from illegal minerals traffic there. KPFA's Ann Garrison has the story.
KPFA/Ann Garrison: The 2001 UN Panel of Experts on the Illegal Minerals Trade in the Democratic Republic of the Congo reported that militias fighting in Congo were closely allied with Rwanda, Uganda, and that they were smuggling Congolese minerals across the eastern Congolese border into both countries. The experts also reported that Rwandan President Paul Kagame and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni were then, quote, "on the verge of becoming the godfathers of illegal resource exploitation and ongoing conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. "They have," the UN experts wrote, "indirectly given criminal cartels a unique opportunity to organize and operate in this fragile and sensitive region."
In Paragraphs 181 - 190 the experts described the complicity and/or collaboration of donor nations, foreign corporations, cargo companies, private banks, and the World Bank. The World Bank, they said, gave the impression of rewarding both Rwanda and Uganda for plundering the Congo, by proposing them for a new debt relief program.
The experts also pointed to evidence of direct and indirect involvement by embassy staff and cooperation agencies from developed countries. And, they singled out the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Denmark, Germany and the U.S. as the main bilateral donors to Uganda and Rwanda.
In Paragraph 197, the UN experts named four Rwandan business associates of Rwandan President Paul Kagame and said that - quote, "what all four share is direct involvement in the exploitation of natural resources in the areas of Congo controlled by Rwanda." In Paragraph 212, they wrote that Rwanda, by plundering Congolese resources, had been able to create a "self-sustaining war."
William Mitchell Law Professor Peter Erlinder is Plaintiff's Counsel in Habyarimana vs. Kagame, a civil lawsuit in U.S. courts, alleging that President Kagame ordered the assassination of the Rwandan and Burundian presidents that triggered the Rwanda Genocide, then plundered the Democratic Republic of the Congo in consequent wars. Erlinder told KPFA it's good that Rwanda has agreed to return 90 tonnes of stolen minerals to Congo, but, that he shouldn't now be rewarded for returning what never should have been stolen:
Peter Erlinder: The Security Council has known since at least 2001 and 4 that Rwanda has been engaged in stealing minerals from the Congo on a massive scale for more than 10 years, at a rate of at least $250 million a year. The amounts have been huge. Anyone who knows Rwanda knows that nothing goes in or leaves Rwanda, of any consequence, without the Kagame regime knowing about it. The Kagame regime knows about these minerals that have been entering Rwanda illegally for all these years We're happy they gave a little back, but they never should have invaded the Congo and occupied the eastern Congo in the first place, so there should be no points given for having emptied the cookie jar and then giving back one of the cookies.
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