
One hundred years ago, a global outrage surrounding the death of an estimated 10 million Congolese resulted in the end of King Leopold II of Belgium’s rule in the Congo. Ordinary people around the world from all walks of life stood at the side of the Congolese and demanded the end of the first recorded Congolese holocaust. A century later, the world finds itself facing the same issue, where the Congolese people are subjected to unimaginable suffering.
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World War II,
“Challenge of the Congo”,
“Final Report of the Panel of Experts on the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources and Other Forms of Wealth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo”

Cobalt is essential to our military industries’ ability to manufacture the modern weapons of war. So, the Congo War, a.k.a. the African holocaust, is a war for the sake of war itself.
Tags:
African holocaust,
African proxy armies,
African World War,
Ann Garrison,
Barack Obama,
Blue Angels,
cobalt,
coltan,
Congo,
Congo War,
Congolese Army (FARDC),
Congrès National pour la Défense du Peuple (CNDP),
Forces Democratique de Liberation du Rwanda (FDLR),
Katanga Copper Belt,
Lord's Resistance Army (LRA),
Patrice Lumumba,
President Patrice Emery Lumumba,
Robert Gates,
Rwanda,
Rwandan Defense Forces (RDF),
U.N. peacekeepers (MONUC),
Uganda,
Ugandan army (UPDF)

The war in Congo is a U.S. proxy war; the U.S. uses Kagame, the Rwandan army and terrorist Gen. Laurent Nkunda as their African proxy force in Congo, but this is war. It has been the deadliest, though barely reported, war on the planet for years.
Tags:
Ann Garrison,
cobalt,
deadliest war on the planet,
Democratic Republic of Congo,
Gen. Laurent Nkunda,
Kambale Musavuli,
Katanga Province,
North Kivu Province,
Paul Kagame,
Rwanda,
U.S. State Department's Assistant Secretary for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer,
Zaire

Following “Break the Silence” Congo Week, Kambale Musavuli urges the global community, and African-Americans in particular, to revitalize international attention on the Congo as a means of shedding light on the ongoing conflict and harnessing the potential for strong advocacy relationships.
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"Break the Silence" Congo Week,
cobalt,
coltan,
Congo,
copper,
Cynthia McKinney,
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC),
DRC,
eastern Congo,
FreePort McMoRan,
Friends of the Congo,
George Foreman,
gorillas,
Heart of Darkness,
Joseph Conrad,
Kambale Musavuli,
King Leopold II,
Muhammad Ali,
Pambazuka,
Patrice Lumumba,
Rumble in the Jungle,
Rwanda,
tin,
Tom Tancredo,
Uganda,
Zaire

The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is the green heart of Africa. The country has the second largest rainforest in the world. It is resource rich but plagued with humanitarian crises resulting from the plundering of the DRC’s mineral resources are severe.
Tags:
Ann Garrison,
bauxite,
Breaking the Silence on the Congo Week,
cadmium,
cassiterite,
child labor,
child soldiers,
coal,
cobalt,
coltan,
conflict diamonds,
Congo Friends,
consumer electronics,
copper,
De Beers,
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC),
diamond,
diamond mines,
Dustin Blitchok,
Friends of the Congo,
germanium,
gold,
human rights,
industrial and gem diamonds,
International Rescue Committee,
iron ore,
Katanga Province,
manganese,
Mbjui Mayi,
mineral resources,
niobium,
radium,
rainforest,
Rwanda Metals,
safe drinking water,
Second Congo War,
Shinkolobwe uranium mine,
silver,
tantalum,
timber,
tin,
UNICEF,
uranium,
zinc