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Breaking the Silence and Answering Nicholas Kristof on Congo

Friends of the Congo (FOTC) recently posted a letter on their blog in response to New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof’s recent series of articles on the Congo.

The letter covered a lot of ground, and responded to Kristof’s central question of why the millions dead in Congo had not commanded the same attention given to Darfur and outlined several ways Americans can help end Congo’s genocide. (more…)

VIDEO: Ambassador Olara Otunnu on NY Radio, Speaks on Uganda Genocide, LRA, Congo, Uganda's Image in the West and More…

Olara Otunnu was interviewed on New York public radio in January. The 8-part show is available on youtube, or directly from WBAI FM NY’s archives. (more…)

Congo’s Agony, Prolonged by the West

While U.S.  corporations – cellphone, video game, and computer manufacturers in particular – continue to profit from Congo’s riches, more than 5 million Congolese people have died due to resource-related conflicts in the last decade alone – with neighboring countries Uganda and Rwanda playing a major role in the conflict.

Congolese student activist and spokesperson for Friends of the Congo Kambale Musavuli offers real solutions to Congo’s crisis and explains why the “conflict minerals” approach  misses the mark and why Western nations like the United States must change course in order to effectively resolve Congo’s long-running conflicts.

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Genocide in Comparative Perspective: the Jewish and Acholi Experience

http://z.about.com/d/africanhistory/1/0/z/8/Museveni002.JPG

The following article reviews similarities between the Jewish holocaust and Acholi Genocide, in response to a debate by Ugandan army General David Tinyefunza and former UN Undersecretary General for Children in Armed Conflict, Dr. Olara Otunnu.

Although not “officially” recognized, the orchestration of mass deaths in Uganda have crossed the threshold of genocide.

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The Darfur the West Isn’t Recognizing as It Moralizes About the Region (New York Times)

HOWARD W. FRENCH

Published: March 29, 2009

For many who survey an African landscape strewn with political wreckage, nowadays merely to raise the subject of European colonialism, which formally ended across most of the continent five decades ago, is to ring alarm bells of excuse making. (more…)

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