President Obama should be aware about killings of RPF, RCD, CNDP and M23 Tutsi military and civil commanders who are responsible for mass-killings of more than 8 million Hutu Congolese and Rwandan Hutu .
Victims and survivors in both countries want nothing but Transparancy and Justice.
Why President Obama still fails to impliment a policy that might impose sanctions to both Rwandan and Congolese Tutsi criminals?
Did
- The US secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
- The US ambassador Susan Rice
- And the US Assistant Secretary Jonnie Carlton
Among the most serious critiques was the accusation that she actively protected Rwandan President Paul Kagame and senior members of his government from being sanctioned for funding and supporting the rebels that caused Eastern Congo's recent violence.
- RCD (Kabarebe, Bizima Karaha, Ruberwa, Nyarygabo, Bisengimana,etc),
- CNDP (Kabarebe, Mutebusi, Nkunda, Ntaganda, etc),
- M23 (Kabarebe, Ntaganda, etc.)
the real disease of the DRC, Rwanda and of African Great Lakes Region : THE BLOODIEST DICTATOR PAUL KAGAME AND HIS RPF Tutsi extremists ( Kabarebe, Nziza, Kayonga,Musoni, etc),
It is the US President Obama's Responsibility to Protect, the moral imperative to protect throughout the world peoples and nations from Kagame and his proxy armis and militia's genocide and mass atrocities.
Question: Do Rwandan and Congolese people face Nefarious Genocides?
What you see is what you get: Thousands even millions of Congolese and Rwandan Hutu victims since the year 1990 RPF invasion of Rwanda and after 1996 and 1998 are unworthy of official notice and therefore of no interest to the establishment media and intellectuals.
The authors reveal the media bias towards U.S. based-crimes by tabulating newspapers’ use of the word genocide for the Iraq sanctions regime and comparing it to cases in Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda and Darfur. The table notes the estimated deaths per theater and the number of instances newspapers use the word genocide to describe the conditions of the locality to show the ratio of deaths to genocide usage. In Iraq the rate was 10,000 deaths to 1 use of the word genocide with 80 instances (with an estimated 800,000 deaths from the sanctions). Meanwhile Kosovo, with an estimated 4,000 deaths, genocide usage has a ratio of 12 to 1 with 323 instances.
But while the Hutu deaths and suffering in Congo and Rwanda is horrendous, it does not constitute genocide and those to be brought to justice - ICC in Holland are the proxy militia's of those responsible: President Kagame and his RPF co-accused and high commanders of different groups of rebels in the Congo.
We all know and it's matter of facts:
The same authors reveal the role current Rwandan President Paul Kagame, the U.S.-backed (and trained) former military officer of the Tutsi-led Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), of fomenting the violence that spiraled into epic proportions between April and July in 1994 even before since October 1990 with the Ugandan Invasion of Rwanda.
The RPF, formerly a wing of the Ugandan army (where Kagame formerly served as intelligence director) took part in the Ugandan invasion of Rwanda in 1990, killing after raping Hutu women, displacing and mass-slaghtering several hundred thousand Hutu farmers and intellectuals.
We also remember that RPF has also been accused of carrying out the assassination of former Rwandan President Juvénal Habyarimana in 1994, an act that many believe triggered the Hutus’ bloody response. It should also be noted that Kagame has come recently under fire for arresting and detaining an American lawyer who had filed a lawsuit against Kagame in Oklahoma City accusing the president of the former president’s assassination, and who has been representing a Rwandan and Kagame opponent against trumped up charges of genocide. Further evidence Herman and Peterson use to dismantle the simplistic, yet politically useful perpetrator-victim narrative includes International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda testimony and rulings.
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| US President Obama |
U.S. President Barack Obama urged
Rwandan President Paul Kagame to end all assistance for rebel
groups in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, calling such
support “inconsistent” with regional stability.
During a phone call yesterday with Kagame, Obama pressed the importance of “reaching a transparent and credible political agreement that includes an end to impunity” by commanders of rebels, including the M23 group, linked to human rights abuses, according to a White House statement.
The call comes a week after U.S. lawmakers joined human- rights groups in calling on the administration to get tough with Rwanda for backing rebels in the eastern part of Congo. The United Nations says the Rwandan government provided direct support to the M23 rebels that captured the city of Goma in Congo last month.
Obama “expressed his belief that from this crisis should emerge a political agreement that addresses the underlying regional security, economic, and governance issues while upholding” Congo’s territorial integrity, according to the White House statement.
The crisis in Congo has killed 5 million people since 1997 and displaced millions more, according to the U.S. State Department. At stake in the eastern part of Congo, bordering Rwanda and Uganda, are deposits of tin ore, gold, tungsten and coltan, a mineral used in laptops and mobile phones.
Last month, as many as 1,000 Rwandan troops crossed the border into Congo to support rebel operations in the village of Kibumba, according to a letter from the UN Group of Experts that is monitoring the crisis for the Security Council.
To contact the reporter on this story: David Lerman in Washington at dlerman1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Steven Komarow at skomarow1@bloomberg.net;
During a phone call yesterday with Kagame, Obama pressed the importance of “reaching a transparent and credible political agreement that includes an end to impunity” by commanders of rebels, including the M23 group, linked to human rights abuses, according to a White House statement.
The call comes a week after U.S. lawmakers joined human- rights groups in calling on the administration to get tough with Rwanda for backing rebels in the eastern part of Congo. The United Nations says the Rwandan government provided direct support to the M23 rebels that captured the city of Goma in Congo last month.
Obama “expressed his belief that from this crisis should emerge a political agreement that addresses the underlying regional security, economic, and governance issues while upholding” Congo’s territorial integrity, according to the White House statement.
The crisis in Congo has killed 5 million people since 1997 and displaced millions more, according to the U.S. State Department. At stake in the eastern part of Congo, bordering Rwanda and Uganda, are deposits of tin ore, gold, tungsten and coltan, a mineral used in laptops and mobile phones.
Last month, as many as 1,000 Rwandan troops crossed the border into Congo to support rebel operations in the village of Kibumba, according to a letter from the UN Group of Experts that is monitoring the crisis for the Security Council.
To contact the reporter on this story: David Lerman in Washington at dlerman1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Steven Komarow at skomarow1@bloomberg.net;
Until we address and correct these inadequacies, biases and contradictions within the global hierarchy, international justice system and current human rights regime history will continue to be littered by the corpses of the innocent, whether genocide is the goal or the alibi. This book can be used as a reference by activists and policy makers to help us right these wrongs. We can’t afford to wait.
Cyril Mychalejko is an editor at UpsideDownWorld.org. He can be reached at Cyril@upsidedownworld.org. Read other articles by Cyril.
The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a "time", yet It cannot be destroyed. ==> Wolverine


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