SUDAN NOW

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Opinion: Consumers Can Influence Trade in Conflict Minerals

By John Prendergast — Special to GlobalPost
Published: December 3, 2009 08:31 ET

From mine to cell phone — illuminating Congo's conflict mineral supply chain.

UN REPORT CHARGES US COMPANY HELPS FUEL WAR IN CONGO

By Joe Lauria — Special to GlobalPost
Published: December 3, 2009 06:34 ET
Updated: December 3, 2009 10:18 ET

Both sides of Congo war get funds from sale of minerals used in mobile phones.

ENOUGH's Response

ENOUGH's Response About US Legislation

Enough sent me their response about my blog posting on US legislation on conflict minerals. I apologize for the delay in posting it and I stand corrected on the auditing mechanism the House bill proposes. Nonetheless, I think my comment that the bill relies on being able to distinguish conflict from non-conflict minerals at a local level in the DRC, which we are not yet able to do...

Toutefois, merci a ENOUGH pour la reponse:

At Congo Siasa, Jason Stearns highlights the push for U.S. legislation to tackle the problem of conflict minerals in eastern Congo. Jason rightly notes that this level of congressional enthusiasm for the Congo is unprecedented, and is already beginning to influence thinking elsewhere around the world, particularly in European capitals. He also questions the efficacy of legislation that seeks to impose accountability on the supply chain for Congolese minerals starting at the international level and working backwards to the mines themselves.

There are a couple of specific provisions within the Conflict Minerals Trade Act (H.R. 4128) worth clarifying in response to Jason’s concerns. At the core of this bill is a set of audit and import declaration requirements that have been carefully calibrated to function as part of a wider policy push to cut off the flow of financing from the minerals trade to armed groups and military units in eastern Congo. These requirements are targeted, with the audits specifically aimed at the smelting and refining facilities where mineral ores are transformed into metals. Thanks to the investigations conducted by Jason and the rest of the experts tasked by the UN to look at this issue, we know that even refining facilities based in East Asia have much more knowledge and control over the mineral supply chain than previously understood. The audit and import declaration mechanism is also sequenced: the bill would prohibit the import of goods containing minerals that come from non-audited facilities, but this only kicks in two years after the bill is enacted.

These nuances are in the bill are intended to provide practical means to incentivize minerals traders in Congo and around the world to become more accountable so as to maintain their access to international markets, recognizing that this will not happen overnight. The audit system in this bill would crucially depend upon a strong, independent monitoring body based in Congo with the authority and capability to crack down on the illicit trade, just as Jason recommends.

In response to increasing pressure, industry insiders from Congolese comptoirs all the way to Asian smelters and U.S. electronics companies have committed themselves to a more transparent and traceable way of doing business. The possibility of U.S. legislation has already invigorated those efforts and the probability that this bill might actually pass should keep that momentum going. Passing a conflict minerals law in the United States won’t solve the problem on its own, but it has a chance to catalyze wider reform efforts that would allow Congolese civilians to meaningfully benefit from these resources.

Jason Stearns on Conflict Minerals

US Congress Tackles Conflict Minerals

Yesterday, the US congressman Jim McDermott (D-WA) unveiled legislation he will introduce in the U.S. House of Representatives today to help stop trade in conflict minerals in the Congo. His initiative was applauded by many advocacy groups, including the Enough Campaign, Human Rights' Watch and Global Witness.

This is good news indeed. Now we have three initiatives in the US government aimed at quelling the trade in conflict minerals in the Congo. In addition to this initiative, there is the Congo Minerals Act that Senators Brownback (R-KS), Duck Durbin (D-IL) and Russ Feingold (D-WI) introduced to the upper house in April 2009, as well as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act signed into law in October 2009 requiring the State and Defense Departments to work together to create a map of mining areas and zones occupied by armed groups in the eastern Congo.

This is unprecedented. Previously, the furthest the US Congress has gone is to issue resolutions condemning violence, supporting peace processes and holding hearings. The European Union is watching closely, and advocates in France are considering following suit with pressure on the French parliament. It's nice to see the US taking the lead on this.

But what do these acts actually call for? Here are the most important items in the House bill:

* definition by commerce secretary of what constitutes a conflict mineral good, the tasking of regular audits of mineral processing facilities in the US
* create a conflict minerals map
* support for further investigations by the UN Group of Experts;
* mapping of which armed groups control key mines in eastern Congo;
* inclusion of information on the negative impact of mineral exploitation and trade on human rights in Congo in the annual human rights reports;
* GAO review to evaluate adherence and effectiveness of policies

The Senate bill is similar, requiring amongst other things that "companies that are involved in commercial activities involving three minerals (coltan, cassiterite, and wolframite) to disclose the country of origin of the minerals to the Securities and Exchange Commission. If the minerals are from DRC or neighboring countries, companies would have to also disclose the mine of origin."

The main flaw in this legislation, as I have argued before, (I tend to be repetitious) is that it relies on being able to discern what a conflict mineral is. Otherwise the mining companies in the US will just throw their hands up and claim not to know where the minerals are from. This is currently what mining traders in Goma and Bukavu do - they just say: "All we know is that it comes from the interior, we have no idea where it is from." They are often lying, but it is sometimes difficult to prove them wrong - with the UN Group of Experts, we had to retrace the supply chain, sifting through stacks of Congolese documents (which are sometimes unreliable) and get testimony from mining industry insiders.

One idea is to start this kind of certification in several pilot projects and then trying to spread out from there. There is currently an effort being launched by MONUC, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the Canadian government to establish "centres de negoce" (trading centers) in five places in North and South Kivu (Mubi, Rubaya, Hombo, Baraka and Kamituga) where international officials would support the Congolese government and police to begin inspecting shipments and certifying their origin. Congolese revenue agents would also be present to levy taxes.

Even here, though, none of the centers would be established at the mines themselves. In the case of Mubi, potentially the biggest center, miners would have to shlep minerals 50 kilometers from the Bisie mine, the biggest tin mine in North Kivu. On the way, minerals from areas controlled by armed groups could be infiltrated into the supply chain; by the time the certifying agents in Mubi look at the bags full of tin, they will have a hard time knowing if it is conflict minerals or not.

We could try certifying at the mines themselves, starting with a dozen or so of the biggest mines. This would require sending reliable agents and people to protect them to these sites, not an easy task as some of the biggest mines are over a day walk from the closest road or airstrip (like Bisie, a 16 hour slog through the jungle from mine to airstrip). This would also face stiff opposition from traders, as it would reduce tin exports by significant amounts, as even "legitimate" mining sites (i.e. those occupied by the Congolese army) would be barred. But this could be a start and something for donors to commission studies to see which sites would be most appropriate.

In the meantime, a quick way of of imposing some accountability in the sector is to take the approach that Global Witness and the UN Group of Experts already have: by investigating the traders and finding out who is knowingly dealing in minerals from rebel-controlled areas. I call this the policing option and recommend setting it up as an official third-party monitor, recognized by the Congolese government with a clear agreement on what illegal activity means, what prerogatives they have under Congolese law and what the sanctions would be violations.

Hence, I think the US legislators' initiatives are laudable, but have a somewhat backwards approach - we should first try to institute mechanisms of accountability at the local level, then at the international level. Of course, the two approaches reinforce each other, and I understand some US-based electronics companies may even be willing to fund such local institutions in the Congo.
CONGO WOMEN

Monday, November 30, 2009

TOMORROW, CONFERENCE CALL ON CONGO'S CONFLICT MINERALS

with Lisa J. Shannon of Run for Congo's Women, Brian Sage of the IRC and John Prendergast of the Enough Project

Start: Dec 1 2009 - 4:30PM EST/C/1:30PM PST
End: Dec 1 2009 - 5:30PM EST/C/2:30PM PST

On Sunday November 29, 60 Minutes' "Congo Gold" episode revealed how the mining of gold and other conflict minerals fuels Congo's war, the deadliest in the world.

On Tuesday, December 1 at 4:30 PM EST/1:30 PM PST, dial-in for a special discussion with Enough’s John Prendergast, International Rescue Committee's Brian Sage, and Run for Congo Women’s Lisa Shannon, to get the behind the scenes account of making the episode and an update on the issue.

Date: Tuesday, December 1

Time: 4:30PM EST/1:30 PM PST

Congo's Conflict Minerals Conference ID: 44050208

Toll-free Dial-in: 887-254-9825

International Dial-in: 281-913-8965

60 Minutes Spotlights Gold, Conflict Minerals Fueling Congo's War

CONGO'S GOLD
ACTIONS TO TAKE

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

THIS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29, JOIN JOHN PRENDERGAST ON 60 MINUTES IN THE DRC

How Gold Pays For Congo's Deadly War

Come prepared

IMPORTANT: FRONT PAGE NY TIMES

CONGO ARMY HELPS REBELS GET ARMS, U.N. FINDS
by Jeffrey Gettleman

ON THE BRINK OF MASSIVE FAILURE

Diplomatic double-standards and an international resource grab are stoking one of the worst wars in the world

UN Report Says Congo's Army Aids Rebel Groups

The New York Times reports that the Congolese Army continues to support rebel groups operating in the east.

Read the full story HERE

KHARTOUM, Sudan — A new United Nations report says that the Congolese Army continues to funnel weapons to rebel groups that are smuggling millions of dollars in gold and other minerals out of Congo, helping sustain one of Africa’s bloodiest and most complicated wars.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

New Legislative Action Tackles Congo's Conflict Minerals

by John Prendergast
November 19, 2009

This piece originally appeared on Huffington Post.

The introduction of the Conflict Minerals Trade Act of 2009 in the United States House of Representatives today marks a critical milestone in the ongoing effort to make the use of conflict minerals in our electronics products a thing of the past. The minerals in our cell phones and electronics continue to fuel the brutal conflict in eastern Congo, the world's deadliest war since World War II. More than five million people have died and an epidemic of rape has made Congo the most dangerous place in the world to be a woman or a girl.

If passed, this bill would institute a system of audits and regulations that would prohibit companies from importing conflict minerals into the United States, thereby providing a critical piece of the puzzle to help stop the deadly trade in Congo's conflict minerals. Specifically, the bill targets the trade in gold and the 3 T's (tin, tungsten and tantalum) -- all essential components of our favorite electronic devices. By requiring companies which process and import these minerals to declare whether their products are conflict-free or not, the bill demands transparency and helps ensure that the mineral trade stops contributing to crimes against humanity, including killings of unarmed civilians and horrific sexual violence. Importantly, the bill also establishes mechanisms to allow the Congolese people to benefit from these resources. In the long-term, the bill would direct the United States government to develop a comprehensive strategy toward conflict minerals and support multilateral efforts to break this deadly trade.

The legislative battle is just beginning. The electronics industry has spent about 2 million dollars per month lobbying to relax similar, yet weaker, legislation in the Senate (S. 891). As consumers of electronics, we must take action to ensure passage of this bill by contacting our representatives and demanding that they sign on as co-sponsors. Together we can help turn a system of exploitation and violence into one of peace and opportunity.

Legislation alone will not end the conflict in eastern Congo, but this bill provides a crucial step toward the creation of a practical and enforceable means to ensure that the trade in Congolese minerals contributes to peace rather than war.

I invite you to comment on this post and follow me on Twitter (@JP4Enough)

US Congress tackles conflict minerals

Friday, November 20, 2009

Yesterday, the US congressman Jim McDermott (D-WA) unveiled legislation he will introduce in the U.S. House of Representatives today to help stop trade in conflict minerals in the Congo. His initiative was applauded by many advocacy groups, including the Enough Campaign, Human Rights' Watch and Global Witness.

This is good news indeed. Now we have three initiatives in the US government aimed at quelling the trade in conflict minerals in the Congo. In addition to this initiative, there is the Congo Minerals Act that Senators Brownback (R-KS), Duck Durbin (D-IL) and Russ Feingold (D-WI) introduced to the upper house in April 2009, as well as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act signed into law in October 2009 requiring the State and Defense Departments to work together to create a map of mining areas and zones occupied by armed groups in the eastern Congo.

This is unprecedented. Previously, the furthest the US Congress has gone is to issue resolutions condemning violence, supporting peace processes and holding hearings. The European Union is watching closely, and advocates in France are considering following suit with pressure on the French parliament. It's nice to see the US taking the lead on this.

But what do these acts actually call for? Here are the most important items in the House bill:

* definition by commerce secretary of what constitutes a conflict mineral good, the tasking of regular audits of mineral processing facilities in the US
* create a conflict minerals map
* support for further investigations by the UN Group of Experts;
* mapping of which armed groups control key mines in eastern Congo;
* inclusion of information on the negative impact of mineral exploitation and trade on human rights in Congo in the annual human rights reports;
* GAO review to evaluate adherence and effectiveness of policies

The Senate bill is similar, requiring amongst other things that "companies that are involved in commercial activities involving three minerals (coltan, cassiterite, and wolframite) to disclose the country of origin of the minerals to the Securities and Exchange Commission. If the minerals are from DRC or neighboring countries, companies would have to also disclose the mine of origin."

The main flaw in this legislation, as I have argued before, (I tend to be repetitious) is that it relies on being able to discern what a conflict mineral is. Otherwise the mining companies in the US will just throw their hands up and claim not to know where the minerals are from. This is currently what mining traders in Goma and Bukavu do - they just say: "All we know is that it comes from the interior, we have no idea where it is from." They are often lying, but it is sometimes difficult to prove them wrong - with the UN Group of Experts, we had to retrace the supply chain, sifting through stacks of Congolese documents (which are sometimes unreliable) and get testimony from mining industry insiders.

One idea is to start this kind of certification in several pilot projects and then trying to spread out from there. There is currently an effort being launched by MONUC, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the Canadian government to establish "centres de negoce" (trading centers) in five places in North and South Kivu (Mubi, Rubaya, Hombo, Baraka and Kamituga) where international officials would support the Congolese government and police to begin inspecting shipments and certifying their origin. Congolese revenue agents would also be present to levy taxes.

Even here, though, none of the centers would be established at the mines themselves. In the case of Mubi, potentially the biggest center, miners would have to shlep minerals 50 kilometers from the Bisie mine, the biggest tin mine in North Kivu. On the way, minerals from areas controlled by armed groups could be infiltrated into the supply chain; by the time the certifying agents in Mubi look at the bags full of tin, they will have a hard time knowing if it is conflict minerals or not.

We could try certifying at the mines themselves, starting with a dozen or so of the biggest mines. This would require sending reliable agents and people to protect them to these sites, not an easy task as some of the biggest mines are over a day walk from the closest road or airstrip (like Bisie, a 16 hour slog through the jungle from mine to airstrip). This would also face stiff opposition from traders, as it would reduce tin exports by significant amounts, as even "legitimate" mining sites (i.e. those occupied by the Congolese army) would be barred. But this could be a start and something for donors to commission studies to see which sites would be most appropriate.

In the meantime, a quick way of of imposing some accountability in the sector is to take the approach that Global Witness and the UN Group of Experts already have: by investigating the traders and finding out who is knowingly dealing in minerals from rebel-controlled areas. I call this the policing option and recommend setting it up as an official third-party monitor, recognized by the Congolese government with a clear agreement on what illegal activity means, what prerogatives they have under Congolese law and what the sanctions would be violations.

Hence, I think the US legislators' initiatives are laudable, but have a somewhat backwards approach - we should first try to institute mechanisms of accountability at the local level, then at the international level. Of course, the two approaches reinforce each other, and I understand some US-based electronics companies may even be willing to fund such local institutions in the Congo.

Jason Stearns - Congo Siasa

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Panel Discussion and Reception with Chouchou Namegabe Nabintu

Hi all,

Great event tomorrow (Wednesday) night -- a panel discussion and reception featuring Congolese journalist and activist Chouchou Namegabe Nabintu, President of the Women’s Media Association for South Kivu/AFEM. The flyer for the event is attached as a PDF file (it says Thursday, but it really is Wednesday) and following are the details:

Panel Discussion and Reception with Chouchou Namegabe Nabintu
6:00pm • Wednesday, November 18, 2009
The Thomas E. Golden, Jr. Center, St Thomas More
268 Park Street, New Haven, CT

If you can't make the evening event, Ms. Namegabe will also be hosting a brown bag lunch discussion from 12-1pm on Wednesday in Rosenkranz Hall, Room 241.

Aside from the events, please check out the Congo/Women photo exhibit currently being displayed (until Thursday) at the Thomas Golden Moore Center (the Catholic Center at Yale), 268 Park Street. The exhibit was featured in the New Haven Register this weekend:
http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2009/11/15/news/new_haven/a4-ctcongo.txt

All good things,
Uma

Saturday, November 14, 2009

CONGO/WOMEN Panel

Carroll Bogert, Associate Director, Human Rights Watch,
Leslie Thomas, Curator and Co-Director Congo/Women;
Executive and Creative Director Art Works Projects,
Jocelyn Kelly, Research Coordinator, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative


Thursday, November 12, 2009

FROM MINE TO MOBILE PHONE: THE CONFLICT MINERALS SUPPLY CHAIN

by Sachnev Lezhnev and John Prendergast
Enough experts lead you down the path of the 3Ts—tin, tantalum, tungsten—and gold from the mines of Eastern Congo all the way to your cell phone.

RUINED Captivates D.C. Crowd

From The Enough Project:
Posted by Laura Heaton on Nov 12, 2009


We were thrilled to welcome the cast of RUINED, the Pulitzer prize-winning drama, to Washington for a staged reading on Monday night. Eager to get the real-life message of the play out to an audience of D.C. influentials, the cast donated their performance, which they delivered to a packed house at the Kennedy Center’s Terrace Theater.

The play, set in a mining town in eastern Congo circa present day, tells the story of Mama Nadi, a brothel owner who acts as both a protector and exploiter of women as she tries, with increasing difficulty, to keep the war at bay. The play also highlights the scramble for Congo’s minerals that is perpetuating the violence.

Award-winning playwright Lynn Nottage crafted the play’s leading women characters– portrayed stunningly by Portia (Mama Nadi), Condola Rashad (Sophie), Quincy Tyler Bernstine (Salima), and Chrise Boothe (Josephine) – based on her conversations with Congolese women and survivors living in refugee camps in Uganda. Nottage’s exposure to these first-hand testimonies gives RUINED a strong grounding in the realities of the war that continues to plague eastern Congo, in which women bear the brunt of the violence.

The event closed with a brief discussion between playwright Lynn Nottage, renowned journalist Chouchou Namegabe (who will receive the Knight International Journalism Award tonight), and Enough co-founder John Prendergast, who emphasized the role that each of us – as consumers of conflict minerals – can play in helping to end the violence.

We owe a special thank you to Lynn Nottage and Kate Whoriskey, the play’s director, and to the cast and musicians who traveled from as far away as California to take part in Monday’s performance. The Kennedy Center’s Alicia Adams and Erik Wallin and the Center for American Progress’ Marlene Vasilic were early supporters of our effort to bring RUINED to D.C. and generously worked to open the Kennedy Center’s doors to this important event.

Finally, thank you to those of you who turned out on Monday night and were part of a very engaged audience. Please stay tuned – there is much work we can do in the coming months to get the word out about the atrocities occurring in eastern Congo and ensure that our elected officials get involved in ending the trade in conflict minerals that is helping to fuel violence against Congo’s women.

Based on the outpouring of interest in this event it’s clear that D.C. presents the ideal audience for RUINED. We’re hopeful that the staged reading will lead to a full production in Washington that can reach many more people and generate even more advocacy around its crucial theme.


Photos: (left to right) Enough's John Prendergast greets Ambassador from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Dr. Faida Mitifu; actors perform staged reading of RUINED; Prendergast with journalist Chouchou Namegabe and playwright Lynn Nottage. (Cred
it: D

Friday, November 6, 2009

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

UN Peacekeeping Force Knowingly Supports Abusive Military Operations
Source: Human Rights Watch
November 2, 2009

Some Congolese army soldiers are committing war crimes by viciously targeting the very people they should be protecting. MONUC's continued willingness to provide support for such abusive military operations implicates them in violations of the laws of war.

Anneke Van Woudenberg, senior researcher

(New York) - Congolese armed forces in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo have brutally killed hundreds of civilians and committed widespread rape in the past three months in a military operation backed by the United Nations, Human Rights Watch said today.

Human Rights Watch called on the UN peacekeeping force in Congo, MONUC, to immediately suspend its support to the military operation or risk being implicated in further atrocities.

In two fact-finding missions in eastern Congo in October 2009, Human Rights Watch documented the deliberate killing by Congolese soldiers of at least 270 civilians between the towns of Nyabiondo and Pinga in a remote part of North Kivu province since March. Many of them had been killed during two massacres in August at Mashango and Ndoruma villages. Most of the victims were women, children, and the elderly. Some were decapitated. Others were chopped to death by machete, beaten to death with clubs, or shot as they tried to flee.

"Some Congolese army soldiers are committing war crimes by viciously targeting the very people they should be protecting," said Anneke Van Woudenberg, senior researcher at Human Rights Watch. "MONUC's continued willingness to provide support for such abusive military operations implicates them in violations of the laws of war."

The UN peacekeeping mission, MONUC is a partner with the Congolese army in operation Kimia II, which began on March 2. The aim is to disarm by force the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a Rwandan Hutu militia group, some of whose leaders participated in the genocide in Rwanda in 1994. MONUC provides substantial operational and logistics support to the soldiers, including military firepower, transport, rations, and fuel.

One of the massacres occurred in early August at Mashango hill, 15 kilometers from Nyabiondo, where UN peacekeepers have a base. According to witnesses interviewed by Human Rights Watch, at least 81 civilians were killed when Congolese army soldiers attacked five hamlets within a few kilometers of one another, only one of which contained rebel combatants. The attacking Congolese soldiers made no distinction between combatants and civilians, shooting many at close range or chopping their victims to death with machetes.

In one of the hamlets, Katanda, Congolese army soldiers decapitated four young men, cut off their arms, and then threw their heads and limbs 20 meters away from their bodies. The soldiers then raped 16 women and girls, including a 12-year-old girl, later killing four of them.

On about August 15, Congolese army soldiers massacred another group of civilians in the Nyabiondo area at the village of Ndoruma. Witnesses said that soldiers returning from a failed attack against a local militia allied to the FDLR earlier in the day deliberately killed at least 50 civilians whom they accused of collaborating with the FDLR and their allies. One woman witnessed soldiers kill her husband and then watched in horror as they torched her home, burning to death her three young children inside.

Congolese army soldiers also targeted civilians on the 10-kilometer stretch of road from Nyabiondo to Lwibo. On September 28 and 29, soldiers based at Kinyumba village along the road, abducted and gang-raped two separate groups of young women and girls, about 20 altogether, on their way to the market. When a local militia allied with the FDLR attacked the government soldiers the same day, they were repulsed by the soldiers, who called in help from MONUC's attack helicopters. Some of the women and girls escaped, but Congolese army soldiers killed at least five as they tried to flee.

On October 29, MONUC reported that the Congolese army had begun further military operations in the area north of Nyabiondo, raising concerns about more attacks on civilians.

Human Rights Watch conducted 21 fact-finding missions in North and South Kivu from January to October 2009, and found that Congolese army soldiers had deliberately killed at least 505 civilians from the start of operation Kimia II in March through September. Another 198 civilians were deliberately killed by Congolese army soldiers and their Rwandan army allies during an earlier five-week joint operation, known as Umoja Wetu, in late January and February.

Human Rights Watch also documented brutal retaliatory attacks by the FDLR militia, which has deliberately targeted Congolese civilians in response to government military operations. Between late January and September, the militia group deliberately killed at least 630 civilians, many in the areas of Ziralo, Ufumandu and Waloaluanda, on the border between North and South Kivu provinces.

"War crimes committed by the FDLR militia are absolutely no justification for Congolese government soldiers to commit atrocities," Van Woudenberg said. "The UN should be asking hard questions about the role of its peacekeepers in supporting such abusive operations."

UN officials have repeatedly told Human Rights Watch that they joined operation Kimia II because they believed their participation could help minimize harm to civilians. MONUC's mandate from the UN Security Council, Resolution 1856, permits it to support Congolese army operations against the FDLR and other armed groups. Since operations began, MONUC has made some notable efforts to protect civilians, which have undoubtedly helped to save lives.

The peacekeeping mission's mandate, however, requires it to attach "the highest priority" to protecting civilians. According to a January 13, 2009 note from the UN Office of Legal Affairs, and two subsequent legal notes from the same office on April 1 and October 12, shown to Human Rights Watch, MONUC has an obligation, in advance of agreeing to support any military operations with the Congolese army, to ensure that such operations are planned and conducted in accordance with international humanitarian law. MONUC may not participate in any operations in which there are substantial grounds to believe that the Congolese army units involved might violate international humanitarian law.

The same legal notes also say that MONUC has an obligation to cease its participation in operation Kimia II if it has credible information that the Congolese army is committing gross human rights violations and if attempts to intercede to stop the violations fail.

In May, Human Rights Watch published detailed information on war crimes committed by Congolese army soldiers involved in operation Kimia II. The UN's own investigations in 2009 also revealed that Congolese government soldiers were regularly committing crimes. During mid-2009, MONUC staff drew up a confidential list of 15 Congolese army officers with a track record of serious human rights abuses who were believed to be involved in operation Kimia II, which was presented to the mission's leadership.

UN peacekeeping officials told Human Rights Watch in May, June, and July that concerns about human rights violations committed by Congolese army soldiers involved in operation Kimia II were being discussed privately with Congolese government authorities. In September, the peacekeeping mission belatedly developed a draft policy setting out conditions for its support to operation Kimia II based on respect for human rights, which it submitted to the Congolese government for comment. On October 30, MONUC and the Congolese army established a joint provincial committee in North Kivu to investigate human rights violations committed by army soldiers and to remove abusive commanders. A similar committee is also to be established in South Kivu.

On November 1, Alain Le Roy, the head of the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations announced during a visit to Congo that MONUC would suspend its support to the Congolese army's 213th Brigade operating in the Nyabiondo area. According to Le Roy, MONUC's own investigations had revealed that Congolese army soldiers had killed at least 62 civilians in the Lukweti area, just north of Nyabiondo. It is not yet clear how the suspension will be put into effect.

"Peacekeeping officials knew that war crimes were being committed by Congolese government forces, yet eight months into operation Kimia II, they are only now suspending the UN's support to one of the army units responsible," Van Woudenberg said. "Nyabiondo is not the only area where Congolese army soldiers are committing abuses. MONUC should immediately cease its support to all of operation Kimia II until abusive commanders are removed and effective measures are in place to protect the civilian population."

The Congolese government has also not removed well-known abusers of human rights from the army's ranks. Bosco Ntaganda, wanted on an arrest warrant for war crimes from the International Criminal Court, remains a general in the Congolese army and plays an important role in operation Kimia II, causing further problems for MONUC's support of the operation.

Military operations since January, including operation Kimia II, have resulted in the disarmament of 1,243 FDLR combatants from an estimated strength of 6,000, but the FDLR continues to recruit and its ability to attack civilians remains intact. MONUC should develop a comprehensive strategy to disarm the FDLR, making protection of civilians a priority. Its mandate permits peacekeepers to use force to disarm the FDLR on its own, without joining forces with the abusive Congolese army. The April 1 legal note from the Office of Legal Affairs specifically sets out this option.

"MONUC's continued participation in operation Kimia II, against its mandate and the UN's own legal advice, implicates UN peacekeepers in abuses," Van Woudenberg said. "Urgent consideration should be given to other options to disarm the FDLR militia that won't entail further Congolese army abuses against the people of eastern Congo."

Also available in:

Enough, Global Witness Welcome 2009 Congo Conflict Minerals Act | Enough

Enough, Global Witness Welcome 2009 Congo Conflict Minerals Act | Enough
The New Haven Alliance for Congo cordially invites you to a panel discussion on:

Women and Sexual Violence

in the Congo

November 18, 2009

6:00pm-7:15pm

Reception and viewing of photo exhibit “Congo/Women Portraits of War” to follow

St. Thomas More Center

268 Park Street, New Haven

Panelists:

Chouchou Namegabe Nabintu (Journalist and President of the Women’s Media Association for South Kivu/AFEM, DRC)

Elisabeth Wood (Professor of Political Science, Yale University)


Jeannie Annan (Director of Research and Evaluation, International Rescue Committee)

Moderator: Jason Stearns (Former ICG Central Africa Senior Analyst, Yale Political Science PhD Candidate)

This panel is organized by the New Haven Alliance for Congo with generous support from the Gaddis Smith Seminar Series of the International Affairs Council at Yale University.

For more information please contact Julie McCarthy at julie.mccarthy@yale.edu


Learn More:

South Kivu Women’s Media Association

http://englishafemsk.blogspot.com/

New Haven Alliance for Congo

http://nhcongoalliance.blogspot.com/

International Affairs Council of Yale University

http://www.yale.edu/macmillan/iac/mainternational.htm

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Atticus Presents:
Omékongo Dibinga
A Spoken Word Performance

Thursday, November 5 7:00pm - 8:00pm
1082 Chapel St., New Haven

Atticus and New Haven Alliance for Congo have teamed up to present a spoken work performance by Congolese-American performer Omékongo Dibinga. Dibinga, a motivational speaker, life coach, musician, award-winning poet, and actor, brings his forceful and positive message to New Haven for this special event. Books and CDs will also be available.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

This week, Enough launches "Field Dispatch," a new series by their field researchers in southern Sudan, Congo, and Uganda.

PRESENTING... THE FIELD DISPATCH

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Congo/Women Photography Exhibit at Yale
November 10 - 20, 2009
St. Thomas More Church
Details TBA

Read about Art Works Projects and the Congo/Women photography exhibition at the UN in an article on LENS, the New York Times photojournalism blog:

Behind the Scenes: Suffering, Writ Large by Kassie Bracken

Source: The New York Times

Friday, October 16, 2009

Jason Stearns in the House!

We are thrilled that Jason is a member of NHAC!

A little background on Jason and a welcome note from his new blog on politics in the DR Congo, Congo Siasa:

I have been working on the conflict in the DR Congo for the past eight years, most recently as the Coordinator of the United Nations Group of Experts on the Congo (2008). I have also worked for Heritiers de la Justice, a local human rights NGO (2001), the UN peacekeeping mission MONUC (2002-2004) and the International Crisis Group (2005-2007). A book I wrote on the conflict, Dancing in the Glory of Monsters, is due to be published soon. I am currently obtaining my PhD at Yale University.


Welcome Post

A quick note to kick things off:

Congo Siasa intends to chronicle the complex inner workings of Congo politics, in particular, in the restive Kivus region. It should be pithy, brief and analytical. None of us really have much time for anything else. I will also feature guest bloggers, from the Congo and abroad, as long as their views are within the realm of sound reason and relevant.

French, English and any of the Congolese languagea go (although once we get to Kibangubangu, our readership will become seriously limited).

Soyez le bienvenu.

Congo Siasa


CONGO IN HARLEM SERIES OCTOBER 1-24, 2009

Some of the events this week:

Monday 10/19 - "Women in War Zones" with panel including the film's directors, Eve Ensler (V-Day) and reception catered by Harlem's own Sylvia's Restaurant!

Wednesday 10/21 - "Afro@Digital" with panel including the film's director (flying in from overseas!) and Lincoln Center Film Society's Richard Pena.

Saturday 10/24 - "Reporter" with panel including the film's director and an amazing group of journalists and activists working in the DRC.

Please check out the full schedule for the remaining events at:

Congo in Harlem

Thursday, October 15, 2009

"8 Minutes" in the DR Congo

Sienna Miller travelled to DR Congo in the Spring of 2009 to document the lives of women living in the middle of this treacherous conflict.

"8 Minutes"

Director: David Serota
Producer: Alison Watson
Editor: Giovanni Messner
http://www.dokumentfilms.com
Music by Explosions in the Sky and This Will Destroy You
Film look by Red Rock Micro

Source: TakePart.com

Wednesday, October 14, 2009


Hosted by New Haven Alliance for Congo

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Conflict Minerals in Roll Call


From the ENOUGH Project
Conflict Minerals in Roll Call

An article in Roll Call yesterday looked at the work being done to finalize a Senate bill that would legislate layers of transparency into the global minerals trade. The article heralded conflict minerals as the next big thing in a corporate social responsibility trend set by “Kathie Lee Gifford’s clothing line, Nike shoes, Pakistani soccer balls, Uzbek cotton and diamonds from Sierra Leone.”

As the article noted, “This is not a new concept; the electronics industry in the United States and Europe has a code of conduct and large coalitions that promote a transparent supply chain.” But as our recent strategy paper made clear, these efforts have been woefully insufficient, and women and girls bear the brunt of the violence. The Roll Call article is well worth a read for its explanation of challenges popular movements face but also the great potential they can have to promote human rights.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

BLOOD COLTAN directed by Patrick Forestier for Java Film

Source: www.javafilms.fr
The West’s demand for Coltan, used in mobile phones and computers, is funding the killings in Congo. Under the close watch of rebel militias, children as young as ten work the mines hunting for this black gold. ‘Blood Coltan’ exposes the web of powerful interests protecting this blood trade. Meet the powerful warlords who enslave local population and the European businessmen who continue importing Coltan, in defiance of the UN.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009


"The Greatest Silence: Rape in the Congo"

with Guest Speaker, Filmmaker Lisa F. Jackson

Ms. Jackson will introduce her film

and lead a discussion following the screening.

Tuesday 31 March 2009

7 PM

The Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center
for International and Area Studies at Yale

Luce Hall Auditorium
34 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, Connecticut

Admission is free and open to the public

Sponsored by the Yale Council on African Studies,
Women's Center of the Yale Divinity School and
the New Haven Alliance for Congo

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Friday, March 13, 2009

A SEASON IN THE CONGO

Start: Mar 6 2009 - 5:00pm
End: Apr 5 2009 - 5:59pm

Youth Onstage! is proud to bring to the stage Aimé Césaire's epic drama A Season In the Congo as part of the 2008-2009 "Castillo Performs the World" theatre season. A Season In the Congo poetically chronicles the independence movement in the Congo and is one of the few plays written by the late Aimé Césaire, one of the great surrealist poets of the 20th Century.

Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 pm, Sundays at 2:30 pm

TDF accepted; group rates available.

For tickets and information call the Castillo Box Office

212.941.1234

Order tickets online at www.castillo.org

CONGO/WOMEN PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT

Mar 16 2009 - 3:00pm

Congo/Women is an international photography exhibition and educational campaign that raises awareness of the widespread sexual violence facing women and girls in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The exhibition features powerful life-size photographs that convey the strength and courage of Congolese women. Accompanying essays contextualize the impact of the crisis from a range of perspectives. An advocacy partnership with the Enough Project's Raise Hope for Congo campaign provides tools to demand action and involvement from the global citizenry.

March 16, 2009
James Cohan Gallery
533 West 26th Street
New York, NY

For information: 312.369.8829
congowomen.org
artworksprojects.org
colum.edu/institutewomengender


Thursday, March 12, 2009

Christine Schuler Deschryver Named One of Women's eNews' 21 Leaders for the 21st Century

Vagina Warrior and V-Day's newest member of the team, Christine Schuler Deschryver has been named one of Women's eNews' 21 Leaders for the 21st Century, an awe-inspiring, reader-nominated list of activists and leaders from all over the world who are making news by changing women's lives.

In 2007, Christine joined the V-Day and UNICEF global campaign STOP RAPING OUR GREATEST RESOURCE: POWER TO THE WOMEN AND GIRLS OF THE DRC. In January of 2009, Christine became a full time staff member and will lead V-Day's efforts on the ground in the Congo as Director of V-Day Congo and City of Joy.

Video of Christine talking about her experiences in Congo:
http://newsite.vday.org/meet-vday/activist-spotlights/christine-schuler-deschryver

"BLOOD COLTAN"

Year : 2007 / Duration : 52 min / Production : Tac Presse / Director : Patrick Forestier / Version available : English
The West’s demand for Coltan, used in mobile phones and computers, is funding the killings in Congo. Under the close watch of rebel militias, children as young as ten work the mines hunting for this black gold. ‘Blood Coltan’ exposes the web of powerful interests protecting this blood trade. Meet the powerful warlords who enslave local population and the European businessmen who continue importing Coltan, in defiance of the UN.

http://www.javafilms.fr/spip.php?page=articlef&id_article=8&user=blood"


RAISE Hope for Congo P.S.A. featuring Ken Baumann, Maria Bello, Emmanuelle Chriqui, Melissa FItzgerald, Emile Hirsch, Jimmy Jean-Louis, and Joel Madden. Join the movement at www.raisehopeforcongo....

Friday, February 27, 2009

DR Congo outsources its military

One of many Ugandan soldiers in DR Congo to fight rebels at the request of the government in Kinshasa

Mark Doyle of the BBC published a great report outlining the most recent involvement of Rwandan, Ugandan and South Sudanese forces in the conflict in Eastern Congo.

Read the BBC Report here

Thursday, February 26, 2009

IT industry accused of fuelling trade in "blood tin"

Campaign groups claim manufacturers are using tin and other metals mined from conflict zones in the Democratic Republic of Congo:

Read article here

Rwandan Troops Leave DRC


Thousands of Rwandan troops are leaving the Democratic Republic of Congo, five weeks after they crossed the border to attack Hutu rebels, who are behind years of conflict in the region.

In Pictures - from the BBC

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

If you missed it: Congo Event at Yale Law School

The following link is a video recording of the February 13, 2009 event at Yale Law School: "Warring Parties: Conflict in Democratic Republic of Congo."

Warring Parties - Quicktime


Check out the short film by photojournalist Marcus Bleasdale that was screened at the event:
Rape of a Nation

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Event details:
"Warring Parties: Conflict in Democratic Republic of Congo"

Short film screening: “Rape of a Nation,” by Marcus Bleasdale

Panel Discussion with:
Séverine Autesserre, Barnard College, Columbia University
Bryan Mealer, author of “All Things Must Fight to Live: Stories of War and Deliverance in Congo
Kambale Musavuli, Student Coordinator, Friends of the Congo
John Prendergast, Co-Chair, ENOUGH Project
Peter Rosenblum, Columbia Law School
Moderated by David Simon, Yale University

Reception and Photo Exhibit:
“Portraits of Survival" by Finbarr O'Reilly, Reuters West and Central Africa Chief Photographer

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

The Search for Gold in Congo


The New York Times published a 9 photo slideshow today entitled "The Search for Gold in Congo."

"Civil conflict in Congo has been driven for more than a decade by the violent struggle for control over the country's vast natural resources, including gold, diamonds and timber, most of which are exploited using hard manual labor."

View the slideshow here

Herbert on Congo in the NY Times

Bob Herbert of the New York Times writes about sexual violence in the Congo on February 21st:

Perhaps we’ve heard so little about them because the crimes are so unspeakable, the evil so profound.

Bob Herbert

For years now, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, marauding bands of soldiers and militias have been waging a war of rape and destruction against women. This sustained campaign of mind-bending atrocities, mostly in the eastern part of the country, has been one of the strategic tools in a wider war that has continued, with varying degrees of intensity, since the 1990s. Millions have been killed.

Read the full article

Monday, February 23, 2009

Welcome to the Alliance

Dear all,
Welcome to the New Haven Alliance for Congo. With the help of community groups, individuals and universities in the greater Connecticut area, we hope to bring attention to the continuing conflict in Democratic Republic of the Congo. Please check back regularly for news items, posts, events and information all relating to Congo. As our "Alliance" grows, we hope to join a larger movement across the US and indeed the world, standing in solidarity with Congolese people and shining light on a war that has killed millions and continues to do so.

Please spread the word, and get involved! Contact us at nhcongoalliance@gmail.com with any ideas, suggestions, improvements, etc. Join the community - let's do what we can for the Congo.