Samedi 26 juillet 2008
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PRESS RELEASE
July/24/2008
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For Immediate Release
Contacts:
Kambale Musavuli
Office: 888-584-6510
cell: 336-207-5819
support@congoweek.org
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Why Barack Obama May Be Off Point on the Congo?
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Washington, DC - July 24, 2008 - John
McCain's campaign questioned Barack Obama's commitment to stopping genocide. On his visit to Israel Obama proclaimed "never again" referencing the Holocaust. McCain's
campaign quickly pounced with a press release saying that if Obama truly believed in "never again" and stopping genocide he would have supported the troop surge in
Iraq.
Reporters pointed out a statement made in 2007 by Obama when he said the following: "Well, look, if that's the criteria [genocide or
humanitarian crises] by which we are making decisions on the deployment of U.S. forces, then by that argument you would have 300,000 troops in the Congo right now -
where millions have been slaughtered as a consequence of ethnic strife - which we haven't done."
Statements such as the above attributed to Obama, explains in part why there is such silence around the tragic situation in the Congo. The conflict is unfortunately and
wrongly presented as ethnic bloodletting. The ethnic rationale for the conflict in the Congo, plays into long-held stereotypes that Africans are interminably trapped in
"tribal bloodletting," hence, nothing can be done, resolutions are futile and there is little need to talk about the situation or address the issue.
The central reason for the nearly six million dead in the Congo since 1996 is not "ethnic strife" but rather the scramble for Congo's enormous treasure trove of
diamonds, gold, copper, cobalt, coltan, tin, timber and more. Kenyan Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, Wangari Maathai rightly assesses the problem when she notes,
"these wars when you look at them, they are all about resources and who is going to control them."
Beneficiaries of Congo's resource war include foreign corporations and consumers. Senator Sam Brownback reminds us that "almost every
American owns at least one device in which coltan has been used." Coltan is a key mineral that drives the conflict in the Congo and is found in our cell phones,
laptop computers, digital cameras, video game consoles and many other devices. Congo has anywhere from 64% - 80% of the world's reserve of coltan.
We are hopeful that the journalists at Unity 08 conference in Chicago this week will break the silence around the Congo and ask both Obama and McCain about their
policies for contributing to ending the conflict in the Congo and stopping the systematic looting of Congo's natural resources.
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Join us on Friday, July 25, 2008 from 3:30 - 3:55 PM for a press conference on the current situation in the Congo. Press Conference
Center, Media Showcase & Career Expo, Halls F1 & F2, McCormick Place West.
About Friends of the Congo (friendsofthecongo.org)
The Friends of the Congo (FOTC) is a 501 (c) 3 tax-exempt advocacy organization based in Washington, DC. The FOTC was established at the behest of Congolese human rights
and grassroots institutions in 2004, to work together to bring about peaceful and lasting change in the Democratic Republic of Congo, formerly Zaire.
About Congo Week (www.congoweek.org)
Congo Week is a global initiative led by students to raise awareness about the situation in the Congo and provide support to the people of the Congo.
Congo Week will occur from October 19 - 25, 2008 on campuses and in communities throughout the globe from Brazil to Belgium, South Africa to Sweden, Kenya to Korea and
in many other localities.
Students and community leaders will show films, hold teach-ins, organize forums, host fund-raisers, participate in cell phone boycott, and many other activities and
events.
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Par APPA
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Publié dans : ONG/Associations.
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