Σελίδες

Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα AΦΡΙΚΗ. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων
Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα AΦΡΙΚΗ. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων

Κυριακή 10 Απριλίου 2011

French helicopters have fired rockets on the residence of Laurent Gbagbo,



United Nations and French helicopters have fired rockets on the residence of Laurent Gbagbo, Cote d'Ivoire's incumbent president, in Abidjan.
Για άλλη μια φορά ο ΟΗΕ και οι Γάλοι πέρνουν μέρος σε έναν εμφύλιο προκειμένου να εξασφαλίσουν τα συμφέροντα τους  
11-4-2011 Cote d'Ivoire's Laurent Gbagbo has surrendered to the forces of presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara and is being held by them, the United Nations has said."The United Nations mission in Cote d'Ivoire has confirmed that former President Laurent Gbagbo has surrendered to the forces of Alassane Ouattara and is currently in their custody," UN spokesman Farhan Haq said on Monday.

Πέμπτη 10 Μαρτίου 2011

Gbagbo rejects fresh calls to quit


Gbagbo rejects fresh calls to quit
Violence flared again recently leading to fears that unfinished business from disputed polls could lead to civil war [AFP]
Laurent Gbagbo, Cote d'Ivoire's incumbent leader, has rejected an African Union proposal to step down in favour of presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara, Gbagbo's foreign minister has said.
"We will never accept if the proposal is for President Gbagbo to step down because he is the elected leader of Cote
d'Ivoire," Alcide Djedje said on Thursday.
"We just want President Gbagbo to be president because he has been elected according to the laws in the country. This is our stance."
Later, Pascal Affi N'Guessan, leader of Gbagbo's Ivorian Popular Front, confirmed that the AU proposal to end the
deadlock after a disputed November election was based on an endorsement of Ouattara.
"We have invited the panel to reconsider its position," he told reporters at AU talks in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Civil war threat
"If this initiative doesn't come out with irrefutable and pertinent propositions, we fear that the AU, somehow, will
contribute to what the rebels started in 2002," he warned, referring to a 2002-2003 civil war that split the country in
two.
N'Guessan did not give further details of the AU proposal, due to be announced at the end of the meeting.
Meanwhile, Gbagbo has banned UN and French peacekeeping aircraft from flying over, or landing in the country.
It was announced shortly after Ouattara flew to Ethiopia to attend the AU crisis talks meeting.
Mohammed Adow, Al Jazeera's correspondent in the Ivorian city of Abidjan, said Gbagbo wants to lock Ouattara out of the Ivory Coast when he tries to return tomorrow.

Παρασκευή 25 Φεβρουαρίου 2011

SOMALIA - 88 killed in Mogadishu clashes


Al-Shabab fighters in Somalia
88 killed in Mogadishu clashes
At least 8 civilians and ten Ugandan soldiers have been killed in clashes between al-Shabab fighters and government soldiers backed by African Union forces in Somalia. Al-Shabab fighters carried out a large attack on the Presidential Palace in the capital Mogadishu on Friday, a Press TV correspondent reported. 
They have also taken control of more government bases in War-dhiigley District in the capital. Large numbers of people have fled the districts where fighting is going on. 
This is while Somalia's Prime Minister Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed announced a new offensive on Wednesday and said that 17,000 African Union and Somali soldiers will continue to fight until al-Shabab's hold on Mogadishu is shattered. Somalia has been without an effective central government since former dictator Siad Barre was overthrown by warlords in 1991. 

Τετάρτη 23 Φεβρουαρίου 2011

Somalia is burning again

Deadly attack on Somali police base
Somalia's transitional government has been confined to a few blocks of the capital by fighters [EPA] 

A suicide car bomb attack on a government security base in Mogadishu, Somalia's capital, has killed at least eight people and wounded scores of others, a police official said. The station targeted in Monday's attacks was being used as a training station for government troops. Police said there were likely to be more casualties since fragments of the bomb, shrapnel and wrecked car parts were flung across the road and into various buildings and houses. "At least six police officers were killed. Many others were wounded, the toll could be higher but I don't have more details," said Abdirahman Issa, a senior police official in the city.

Πέμπτη 22 Ιουλίου 2010

Somalia: 3 presidential guards join rebels- Armed groups al-Shabab 'threaten all Somalia'



Three presidential guards at the Somalia presidential palace joined radical Islamist group Al-Shabab

Posted on Thursday 22 July 2010 - 10:52

Abdilatif Maalim, AfricaNews reporter in Nairobi
Three presidential guards at the Somalia presidential palace joined radical Islamist group Al-Shabab, a senior official in government confirmed. Head of the guards Abdullahi Ali said they were permitted to visit their families but later decided to join the Islamist militia.  Al-Shabab has over the last three days engaged government forces in fierce battle as they advance to strategic points at the presidential palace. They paraded the three converted guards who claim they joined the insurgents to fight African Mission troops in Somalia. There is growing fear across the horn of Africa as the news broke to the public. Security analysts warned that danger looms if trusted guards harbor the intention of joining the rebels.
also ..> http://garizo.blogspot.com/2009/05/deadly-battles-in-somali-capital.html
http://garizo.blogspot.com/2008/12/future-of-somalias-transitional.html

Πέμπτη 1 Ιουλίου 2010

Congo Independence Fifty Years After Patrice Lumumba









Congo Independence Fifty Years After
document taken from the http://www.dlynnwaldron.com/lumumba_contents.html - (permission requested.)

LUSY LUSUMBA - "MY HAIR DO IS THE ONLY EVENT IN MY LIFE" 

Imperialists derail liberation struggle from 1960 until today
By Abayomi Azikiwe - Editor, Pan-African News Wire


Five decades after the independence of the former Belgian Congo, the genuine emancipation of this central African state is yet to be realized. Nonetheless, the survival of this state--which has been under assault since 1960 when Patrice Lumumba took charge of the country as Prime Minister representing the Congolese National Movement (MNC)--is a testament of the resilience and fortitude of the people. At this year’s independence celebrations several world leaders including the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon were in attendance. The Democratic Republic of Congo national army put on a parade and display of military equipment that involved 15,000 troops.  The DRC is one of the most mineral-rich states in the world. It has been estimated that the Central African country has 30 percent of the cobalt supply on the planet and 10 percent of the copper. However, despite the tremendous economic potential of this nation, the majority of its people remain poor living off barely more than one dollar a day. The wealth in mineral resources has always made the territory a coveted area for Western imperialism and its agents who have taken enormous natural and human resources from the Congolese people. Beginning in 1876 the Belgian Monarch King Leopold II established the territory as the “Congo Free State” and administered it as his own personal property. A vicious system of plantation agriculture enslaved Africans to work in rubber extraction where 8 million died in order to create a wealthy ruling class in Belgium.

Τετάρτη 30 Ιουνίου 2010

Imperialist States Seek to Block Zimbabwe Diamond Trade Amid New Sanctions Bid by the U.S.

Imperialist States Seek to Block Zimbabwe Diamond Trade Amid New Sanctions Bid by the U.S.


Western imperialist states are continuing their efforts to undermine the sovereignty of the Southern African nation of Zimbabwe. The most egregious campaign recently has been the attempts to block the country from marketing its diamonds on the international market. Utilizing the so-called Kimberley Process (KP), the controllers of the international diamond trade claim that they are seeking to prevent the trafficking in gems by rebel armies, criminal elements and rogue states. Yet the criteria utilized to determine whose diamonds are given the stamp of approval for international marketing is heavily influenced by the ruling class interests in Europe and the United States. Several Western governments are opposing Zimbabwe while the corporate media is stoking the flames of suspicion around the intentions of President Robert Mugabe and the ruling ZANU-PF party. Even though Mugabe and ZANU-PF—who fought for and won the national liberation of the country—have entered into a coalition with the Western-backed Movement for Democratic Change (MDC-T), the destabilization campaign against the leadership of the national democratic revolution continues unabated. A recent article in Newsweek magazine reported that “The Kimberley Process, a body that tries to ensure diamonds do not fund war or human rights abuses, is meeting in Israel this week to decide whether Zimbabwe’s diamonds should be allowed to trade on the world market.” (Newsweek, June 22) The New York Times wrote on June 24 that “Zimbabwe’s military has been accused of violently seizing control of the Marange fields in the eastern part of the country where the diamonds were mined and organizing smuggling operations there, prompting intense debate over giving it an international stamp of approval.” (New York Times, June 24)

Πέμπτη 11 Μαρτίου 2010

Nigerians Recount the Night of Their Bloody Revenge


Nigerians Recount the Night of Their Bloody Revenge


Jon Gambrell/Associated Press
Men detained by police, in the wake of religious violence in Jos, Nigeria, sat in a police waiting room on Wednesday.


Jon Gambrell/Associated Press
A television cameraman films weapons that were seized by police, in Jos, Nigeria on Wednesday.

Jon Gambrell/Associated Press
Men detained by police after violence around Jos, Nigeria, at police headquarters on Wednesday.
The man, Dahiru Adamu, 25, was crouching on the floor in the sprawling police headquarters here, summoned to give an accounting of the terrible night of March 7, when, he said, he and dozens of other herdsmen descended on a slumbering village just south of here and slaughtered hundreds with machetes, knives and cutlasses in a brutal act of sectarian retribution.
On Monday and Tuesday, 332 bodies were buried in a mass grave in the village of Dogo Na Hawa, the Nigerian Red Cross said Wednesday. Human rights groups and the state government say that as many as 500 people may have been killed in the early hours of Sunday morning, in three different villages.
Sunday’s killings were an especially vicious expression of long-running hostilities between Christians and Muslims in this divided nation. Jos and the region around it are on the fault line where the volatile and poor Muslim north and the Christian south meet. In the past decade, some 3,000 people have been killed in interethnic, interreligious violence in this fraught zone. The pattern is familiar and was seen as recently as January: uneasy coexistence suddenly explodes into killing, amplified for days by retaliation.
Mr. Adamu, a Muslim herder, said he went to Dogo Na Hawa, a village of Christians living in mud-brick houses on dirt streets, to avenge the killings of Muslims and their cattle in January.
The operation had been planned at least several days before by a local group called Thank Allah, said one of Mr. Adamu’s fellow detainees, Ibrahim Harouna, who was shackled on the floor next to him. The men spoke in Hausa through an interpreter.“They killed a lot of our Fulanis in January,” Mr. Adamu said, referring to his ethnic group. “So I knew that this time, we would take revenge.”His victims were sleeping when he arrived, he said, and he set their house on fire. Sure enough, they ran out.
“I killed three people,” Mr. Adamu said calmly.
He and the other detainees showed no sign that they had been maltreated; some confessed to killings, and others denied them, speaking in front of the police.
The police quickly arrested about 200 people in connection with the killings, and many of them were crouching anxiously in rows on a bare concrete floor, outside the police headquarters on Wednesday morning. The police have confiscated 14 machetes, 26 bows, arrows, 3 axes, 4 spears and 44 guns. Victims, many of them women and children, were cut down with knives, short and long; few survived.Usually in such attacks, there are twice as many injuries as deaths, said Ben Whitfield of the Doctors Without Borders team in Jos. “It’s unreal,” he said. “These people were definitely caught in the middle of the night and meant to be killed.” Like others in Jos, police officials say they are hoping for peace after years of sectarian killings in the region.
But they are not sure they will get it. The streets in this metropolis of several million were largely deserted Wednesday. Residents spoke of fear and anger, and about 4,300 have fled.
Christians, in interviews, voiced suspicion of the intentions of Muslims and associated them with the taint of terrorism. The state attorney general, Edward Pwajok, a Christian, said that on Wednesday morning he had prosecuted a Nigerian Muslim man living in a Jos suburb who had “acknowledged” being “a member of Al Qaeda.”Mr. Pwajok said there was no indication that the man, Samsudeen Sahsu, was connected to the killings; he said DVDs of Al Qaeda’s activities had been discovered in the man’s home. The group is not previously known to have penetrated Nigeria, though Mr. Sahsu, in a written confession provided by the attorney general, named other members of the “AlKaida Islamic Association.”He said the headquarters were in Maiduguri, where last summer a radical Islamic sect, Boko Haram, was bloodily suppressed by Nigerian security forces.
“Suspicion is still rife,” the state police commissioner, Ikechukwu Aduba, said in an interview in his office in Jos. “We are appealing to the youth to sheath their swords and give peace a chance.”Mr. Aduba sharply disputed the elevated death toll reported by others, saying that the police could confirm only 109 deaths.But a Nigerian Red Cross official in Jos, Adeyemo Adebayo, deputy head of disaster management, said that the number of dead was “possibly” even greater than the 332 buried in the mass grave, since many fled into the bush and could have been cut down there by their attackers. A respected Nigerian human rights group, the Civil Rights Congress, said Monday that its members had counted 492 bodies.
Their attackers had come on foot from nearby villages and had made no preparations for a getaway, said Adebola Hamzat, chief superintendent of the Jos police. “Many of them were still running around,” he said, when they were picked up by the security forces. And many were carrying “cutlasses” — long lethal-looking knives that the police produced for visitors on Wednesday — still stained with blood, he said.“The person was coming toward me; I killed him with a cutlass,” said the young man next to Mr. Adamu, Zakaria Yakubu, 20, insisting that he was defending a fellow Fulani who had been shot. His victim “did not die right away,” Mr. Yakubu said. “When we got to Dogo Na Hawa, we were just looking for our cattle.” He was clutching some bread distributed by the Red Cross.Next to him, Ibrahim Harouna, also 20, would say only that he had “killed some of the people’s pigs,” though the police said he was also suspected of having taken part in the killings.On Wednesday, the mood in Jos was tense among Muslim traders, who complained of a sharp drop in business, and it was anything but forgiving among Christians. They complained that Muslims wanted to supplant “indigenes” — Christians long native to the region.“Some people want to be rulers everywhere,” said Yohanna Yatou, a businessman. “It’s the Muslims. They said they are born to rule.” Williams Danladi said that Muslims “believe that if they die during this war, they will go to heaven.”“We Christians, we don’t believe this,” he said.Others expressed puzzlement and exasperation with the never-ending conflict. “This is a Christian, an indigene,” said Moussa Ismail, pointing to his friend sitting next to him on a downtown stoop, Jacob Ayuba. “We have done business for more than 20 years. How would I attack him?”

Σάββατο 17 Οκτωβρίου 2009

DR Congo: Gov’t denies LRA attacks




The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo has refuted a Medecins Sans Frontiers (MSF) report that the Ugandan Lords Resistance Army, LRA, has stepped up attacks in the country and raided villages. MSF had claimed the rebel insurgency is making it difficult for their aircraft to deliver much needed supplies to the displaced Congolese. They denied the presence of the LRA, saying the violence rather is happening in neighboring Central African Republic. The country’s Information Minister, Lambert Mende, is quoted as saying MSF had the geography of its report wrong."I think there is a bit of confusion. We are well aware that there are some combatant operations near our border with those terrorists of LRA, but in Central African Republic… Things are happening in the south of the Central African Republic. So people are escaping from Central African Republic (CAR), and a few peasants from some villages in the northern part of our country," Mende said.He also denied a section of the report that suggests that hundreds of thousands of Congolese have been forced to flee. Mende said Kinshasa is working with Bangui to resolve the rebel insurgency there."We are cooperating with our neighbors of Central African Republic (and) our army is giving them full information. And we are helping them to crush those people," Mende said.He said denounced suggestions that a regional effort to end LRA insurgencies has failed."It is not true to say that because it is thanks to this regional effort that we have succeeded in sending them (LRA) out of our country. That is why they escaped, and they are trying to bring chaos in the Central African Republic," he said.
Also >> here and here

Παρασκευή 31 Ιουλίου 2009

History repeats itself in Central Africa. As Patrice Lumumba 50 years ago .. the Captured leader of Boko Haram Yusuf Mohammed is executed.


The leader of Boko Haram Mr Mohammed Yusuf is executed during Police custody.
The leader of Boko Haram, a Nigerian Islamic group blamed for a series of deadly attacks in the north of the country, has been shot dead by police.Mohammed Yusuf was killed as he attempted to flee his compound in the city of Maiduguri, police said on Friday. "Mohammed Yusuf was killed by security forces in a shootout while trying to escape," Moses Anegbode, a police assistant inspector-general for northeastern Nigeria, told local BRTV state television. "I can confirm that he has been killed and the body is with us." State television footage shown to officials and journalists showed jubilant police celebrating around the body. Propaganda claim Earlier a Reuters news agency reporter and other local journalists said that they had seen Yusuf in detention at a military barracks in Maiduguri and suffering from no visible injuries. "There had been reports all over Nigeria that they had arrested him, that they had detained him and that he was killed in their custody," Al Jazeera's Yvonne Ndege, reporting from Maiduguri, said. "They [the police] say this is total propaganda designed to discredit the Nigerian security services.""They say that he was killed in a shootout in the compound where he lived, where they found explosive materials, a clinic making all sorts of chemical weapons, they say, and a room where they were putting together all sorts of police uniforms." A correspondent for the UK-based BBC news network said a video shown to officials and journalists showed Yusuf confessing and saying he regretted his actions. "The next moment on the video footage he was seen shot ... They showed his body," the correspondent said.
' Extra-judicial killing'
New York-based Human Rights Watch described Yusuf's death as "an extra-judicial killing"."The extra-judicial killing of Mr Yusuf in police custody is a shocking example of the brazen contempt by the Nigerian police for the rule of law," Eric Guttschuss, the organisation's Nigeria researcher, said. He urged the Nigerian authorities to investigate the circumstances of the killing.Nigerian security forces had attacked a compound and mosque in Maiduguri after fighters from Boko Haram launched apparently co-ordinated attacks across four northern states.The complex was shelled overnight into Thursday before security forces shot many of those attempting to flee, witnesses and sources said. A reporter for the Associated Press news agency saw soldiers shoot their way into the mosque before opening fire on those inside.Boko Haram, which means "Western education is prohibited" in the local Hausa dialect, has called for the enforcement of sharia even among non-Muslims. Nigeria's 140 million people are nearly evenly divided between Christians, who dominate the south, and the primarily northern-based Muslims
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Happy days for BBC !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! >>>>
A Nigerian government minister has expressed relief at the death of an Islamic sect leader !!! , Mohammed Yusuf. Yusuf's body was shown to journalists on Thursday just hours after police said they had captured him. Human rights campaigners alleged he had been executed, but police said on Friday that he died in a shoot-out following days of bloody fighting. Information Minister Dora Akunyili told the BBC that the government "does not condone extra-judicial killings". The militant group led by Yusuf has been blamed for days of violent unrest in which hundreds of people died in clashes between his followers and security forces
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half century after the execution of the captured Patrice Lumumba from the Mabuty history repeats itself 50 years later!!


Τρίτη 28 Ιουλίου 2009

Deadly Nigeria clashes spread

The Road Trip from Abuja to Bauchi

The Road Trip from Abuja to Bauchi

Deadly Nigeria clashes spread - (MEND is not the only problem in Nigeria )
At least 60 people have been killed in two days of violent clashes between police and Islamist fighters across four states in northern Nigeria, police have said.Fighting broke out in Yobe, Borno and Kano states on Monday, a day after at least 50 people were killed in Bauchi state. The fighters belonged to a group known as Boko Haram - which means "Western education is sin" in the local Hausa dialect - and have called for a nationwide enforcement of sharia (Islamic law).Members of the group set a police station ablaze in Potiskum, Yobe state, early on Monday and attacked a police station in Maiduguri in Borno state. Heavily armed members of the group stormed the town of Gamboru-Ngala in Borno, burning a police headquarters, a church and a customs post in the early hours of Monday, residents said.Police targeted Shafiu Mohammed, a local resident, told the AFP news agency that the group had overpowered police and customs officers in the town. "The operation took them two hours. They left around 2:00am (01:00 GMT) without facing any resistance," he said. Police said a police station was also attacked in Wudil town on the outskirts of Kano. Baba Mohammed, a Kano police spokesman, said three members of the group were killed in the attack and another 33 arrested. "An unspecified number of these extremists attacked the police station at around 4:00am (03:00 GMT) and injured two officers, but our men repelled them, killed three and apprehended 33 of them," he said. Boko Haram was founded in 2004, setting up a base dubbed "Afghanistan" in the village of Kanamma in Yobe, close to the border with Niger.The local Daily Trust newspaper quoted Ustaz Mohammed Yusuf, who is purportedly the leader of the group, as saying his followers were ready to die to ensure the institution of a strict Islamic society. "Democracy and [the] current system of education must be changed, otherwise this war that is yet to start would continue for long," he said.'Fanatical organisation'Ogbonnaya Onovo, the national police chief, on Monday vowed to arrest Boko Haram's leaders. "This is a fanatical organisation that is anti-government, anti-people. We don't know what their aims are yet; we are out to identify and arrest their leaders and also destroy their enclaves, wherever they are," he said. Felix Onuah, a freelance journalist in the capital, Abuja, told Al Jazeera that the group was largely unknown until now. "Suddenly they emerged and it was realised that their influence had extended to all of the states in the north," he said. Sectarian clashes between Muslims and Christians in Bauchi state in February left at least five people dead. Muslims attacked Christians and set fire to churches in retaliation for the burning of two mosques, which had been blamed on Christians. Last November, more than 700 people were killed in Jos, the capital of Plateau state, when a political feud over a local election degenerated into bloody confrontation between the two religions.
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The west influenced Protestand relegion of the (english speaking) south clashes with the North islamic part of the country

Τρίτη 14 Ιουλίου 2009

Obama Visits Africa's 'Oil Gulf'

Oil was discovered in Ghana just in 2007. A wide swath of the Atlantic's Western shores, the area stretching from Morocco to Angola is becoming Africa's "Oil Gulf." Oil-producing countries in Africa, including those in the oil-rich Gulf of Guinea, now provide 24 percent of US oil imports. Africa has outstripped the Middle East as an oil supplier to America. Increasingly, Africa's oil is being produced offshore. Off Ghana's deep Atlantic shores, the Texas-based, Kosmos Energy already controls the Jubilee Fields, one of the largest oil finds in West Africa in the past decade, which is predicted to hold 1.2 billion barrels of oil. In May, 2009 Kosmos began to draw bids for shares of its stake in the oil-rich fields. Global energy players — Chevron Corp, Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch Shell, China National Offshore Oil Company and British Petroleum — all with a focused eye on Africa, and a bloodied record on the continent are beginning to circle like vultures. After all, the deadline for Kosmos Energy Bids is July 17, a week after Obama's visit to Ghana. With heightened interest in Africa's oil, the US has moved to strengthen its military (and naval) presence in Africa's "Oil Gulf." In October 2008, the US Africa Command was officially established. Transplanting a framework from the Middle East, US military assets would be aimed at securing Africa's oil and seeking so-called "terrorists." The US Africa Command claims to "help Africans help themselves." The command lists humanitarian missions like dental clinics, building of schools, wells, etc. What is more opaque is the intent to train and arm proxy militaries that can secure and sustain the ever-present fix for the United States' addiction to fossil fuels. Ghanaian human rights and social justice activists are expressing concerns that President Obama's high profile visit may be a fig leaf for covert plans to further US military expansion in Africa and move the US Africa Command from its current site in Stuttgart to an Africa base. Ghanaians and other Africans are clamoring for a new direction in US Africa policy, one based in mutual interests and mutual respect. Can the Obama administration curb the thrust towards a militarized foreign policy by reversing the advance of AFRICOM and US military expansion in Africa?More importantly, can the Obama administration transfer its rhetorical commitment to a green economy into concrete policies that end our addiction to oil? The long term impact of Obama's trip to Ghana may well be viewed through the lens of these critical questions.
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from an older post..>>
Δύο παρατηρήσεις:
1. Από τις πρώτες αναφορές παραπάνω είναι η στροφή προς την Αφρική. Εδω και καιρό έχω δηλώσει ότι η εκλογη Ομπαμα θα σημάνει κάτι τετοιο.
http://garizo.blogspot.com/search/label/A%CE%A6%CE%A1%CE%99%CE%9A%CE%97 >>[..As I believe, that not only the US policy, but the world interest will focus on Africa for the next decade. The election of Obama will accelerate this turn of the US policy towards Africa. DR Congo is the Central “Republic” of Africa bordering with REP of Congo, Angola , Zambia, Tanzania, Uganda, Sudan and Tsad. Almost with all countries of central Africa. The situation and the politics of DR Congo will be f major importance. After 47 years of the execution of Patrice Lumumba the coyntry is in the same turbuland situation that was just after the declaration of its independence. For this reason I submit hereafter links and pictures regarding the history of DR Congo and Patrice Lumuba...]
2. Ολοι οι αναλυτές προτείνουν (εστω και προς θετικηκατεύθυνση) την συνέχιση της ανάμειξης των ΗΠΑ στα εσωτερικά των άλλων χωρών στον ένα η άλλο βαθμό, σαν να θεωρείται πλεον βασικο αξίωμα ,δόγμα αλλα και γεγονός το ότι δηλαδη οι ΗΠΑ έχουν κάποια "θεοσταλτη" αποστολή να σώσουν το Κόσμο ( κατα την έννοια που ιδιοι αντιλαμβάνονται το σώσιμο)

Πέμπτη 25 Ιουνίου 2009

MEND strikes again - Νέα επίθεση της MEND στην Νιγηρία





In Nigeria, MEND strikes again
Nigeria's main rebel group has launched fresh attacks on a Royal Dutch Shell oil pipeline in Rivers state in the Niger Delta. "(The fighters) struck again today ... at the major Shell Bille/Krakama pipeline in Rivers state," Reuters quoted an email statement by the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND). "Cawthorne Channel 1, 2 and 3 flow stations feeding the Bonny export terminal have been effectively put out of service," the statement added. The report could not be immediately verified. Nigerian gunmen are fighting for a larger share of profits from crude oil extractions in Africa's largest oil producer. They have recently embarked on a campaign to scare away foreign workers in the region in a bid to woo oil and gas companied into meeting their demands.
also ..>>
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ABUJA, June 24 (RIA Novosti) - Russia and Nigeria signed six agreements on cooperation, including in the natural gas and space spheres, following talks between the two countries' presidents, Dmitry Medvedev and Umaru Yar'Adua, on Wednesday.Russian energy giant Gazprom and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) agreed to set up a joint venture, and deals on capital investment protection, extradition, and nuclear power were signed.Vladimir Ilyanin, managing director at Gazprom Nigeria, said earlier the Russian gas monopoly could invest some $2.5 billion in the joint venture.Nigeria is the second stop on Medvedev's African tour, following a trip to Egypt.Russia is Nigeria's tenth largest trade partner, with trade of around $300 million per year.The nuclear deal will allow Russia to take part in tenders for the construction of nuclear reactors in Nigeria.Nigeria, which has recoverable uranium reserves, plans to build its first nuclear power plant in 2017, with generation capacity of between 1-4 GW.Nigeria is rich in natural resources, including tin, columbite, iron ore and coal. It has 35 billion barrels of explored oil reserves and 4.1 trillion cubic meters of natural gas. The country is ranked among the world's top 10 crude exporters, and started exporting liquefied natural gas (LNG) in 1999.

Σάββατο 23 Μαΐου 2009

Deadly battles in Somali capital


Deadly battles in Somali capital
At least 45 people have been killed after Somali government forces launched an attack in an attempt to drive opposition fighters from the capital, Mogadishu.Witnesses said at least four members of al-Shabab, an armed group, and a journalist from Shabelle Radio, a local independent station, were among the victims of Friday's clashes.Farhan Mahdi, a Somali military spokesman, said: "This is a large military offensive against violent people."The government will sweep them out of the capital and the fighting will continue until that happens."Dawn battlesThe government claims that it has regained control of three areas of Mogadishu - Tarbunka, Bakara and Howlwadag - since the battles began before dawn."We were surprised to see men in government uniforms fighting in Bakara," Halima Osman, a Mogadishu resident, told the Reuters news agency. "They have recaptured four police stations between here and the palace, and they are advancing further."
But al-Shabab rejected the claims of military success.
"The enemy of Allah attacked our positions this morning and our fighters are defending themselves," Sheikh Ali Mahmoud Rage, a spokesman for al-Shabab, said."They have not not taken any positions from us."Reporters confirmed that several bodies had been left on the ground and at least eight civilians were injured while trying to escape.Sources at two Mogadishu hospitals told Reuters that they received a total of 85 wounded civilians on Friday.Opposition forces Al-Shabab fighters, along with members of other armed opposition groups, have pledged to topple the government of Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, the president. Hassan Mahdi, a spokesman for Hizbul Islam, one of the other groups battling the government, said that troops had struck at their positions too. Scores of people have died as the fighting has escalated in recent weeks [AFP]"Al-Shabab and Hizbul Islam are counter-attacking ... we have pushed them back in some places. There are casualties, but I can't say how many. We are in the middle of fighting," he said.The government on Friday acknowledged that it was unlikely that negotiations with fighters would prove fruitful. "The opposition groups have been provoking us for the last three weeks," Mohamed Abdi Gandi, the Somali defence minister, said. "We shall continue fighting this opposition with foreign ideologies. They want to destroy our government by the use of violence but it will not be." In the past 10 days, more than 100 people have been killed and 46,000 have been displaced as the fighting has escalated. Earlier this week an East African group called on the UN to impose an aerial and maritime blockade on Somalia to prevent the opposition fighters from acquiring more weapons.
ALSO >>

Πέμπτη 21 Μαΐου 2009

Nkunda to be tried in neutral country ?

Nkunda to be tried in neutral country ?
General Laurent Nkunda may be tried in a neutral country out of Democratic Republic of Congo or Rwanda. This follows the refusal of Rwanda to extradite Nkunda to DR Con go to be tried there. Rwanda said its law prevents it from handing him over to Congo while Kinshasa still favors the death penalty. The two countries are therefore considering a neutral country where he could be tried. The Democratic Republic of Congo wants Nkunda extradited for crimes committed during a brutal five-year rebellion in restive North Kivu province, during which he captured vast amounts of territory and threatened the regional capital Goma.However, pundits say DR Congo seems displeased with the neutral country agreement worked out with Kigali. Congolese justice minister was reportedly in Kigali to meet his counterpart in Rwanda in a discussion around the extradition of Nkunda to the DRC, but reports say Rwanda said it would be difficult for it to send Nkunda to DRC because he can be sentenced to deathRwanda is reported to have proposed a third country which does not favour the death penalty to handle the former rebel leader’s trial. Meanwhile, reports say both countries are yet to settle on the neutral country.Nkunda's former rebel movement is reportedly currently in peace talks with the government, but the discussions are said to have so far reached a stalemate.
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Σάββατο 16 Μαΐου 2009

Largest iron ore deposits discovered in Sierra Leone

primary scholl in sierra leone

diamond miners..

Bai Bureh leader of the 1898 rebellion against British rule

The largest iron ore deposit in Africa and third largest in the world has been discovered in northern Sierra Leone in West Africa. The African Minerals Ltd, a company specializes in the exploration of iron ore announced. The company said they have discovered ten billion tons of iron ore in that country. The Chief Executive of the African Mineral Ltd (AML), Frank Timis, said that his company started exploration in Sierra Leone between 2004 and 2005 and through their findings they have been able to discover uranium, nickel, iron ore among other precious minerals.The company was presenting proposed railway and infrastructural development documents to Sierra Leone’s President Ernest Bai Koroma at state house in the presence of cabinet ministers and other foreign dignitaries.Timis said the discovery of Africa’s largest iron ore deposit will not only create jobs for Sierra Leoneans for the next one hundred years but that his company (AML) plans to develop the largest sea port in the whole of west Africa and a railway of 250 kilometers running from the northern part of the country.Similarly, President of AML Alan Watling in his summary of the project said the AML has expanded over $100 million on the exploration, the airborne geo-physics and multi element stream sediment survey.Walting said apart from the business opportunities the AML will create during their operations in Sierra Leone, they also intend to build a dam with an existing 50MW capacity, additional lantern capacity to 160 kw and a hydro power cost of 3.5c/kw.

Δευτέρα 11 Μαΐου 2009

Why white media forced to swallow words on Zuma election ?

White racist media forced to swallow words on Zuma election
AFRICAN FOCUS By Tafataona P. Mahoso
With the help of Euro-American TV channels, the white racist media of South Africa had for several years so criminalised, stigmatised and demonised African National Congress president (and now SA State President) Jacob Zuma that they now have to swallow their own words. A look at just the Mail & Guardian for April 17 and April 24 2009 respectively helps to demonstrate the problem. In the April 17 issue, the ANC president was presented as a threat to "freedom" and a threat to the Constitution of South Africa. The Zapiro cartoons of recent South African history, from Nelson Mandela in 1994 to Jacob Zuma in 2009, in the same issue of April 17, helped to sum up the white racist media’s caricature of South Africa. The first panel shows former South African president Nelson Mandela as a towering, inimitable political and moral giant. The second panel shows former South African president Thabo Mbeki as a political and moral midget who could hardly walk in Mandela’s big shoes. The third panel shows Mbeki in his second term in 2004. Here Mbeki has so deteriorated morally and politically that he now almost sinks completely into just one of Mandela’s big shoes. In the final panel Jacob Zuma comes in, in 2009, as a thug who grabs one of Mandela’s big shoes and pounds a fallen Thabo Mbeki with it. The message is as blunt as it is presumptuous: Jacob Zuma is not only the worst candidate for president of the ANC and of South Africa; he is not even ANC. He has taken over the ANC presidency, but he is alien to the ANC, as far as Zapiro, the Mail & Guardian and the rest of the white-dominated media are concerned. But the ANC swept to victory with 65,9 percent of the popular vote, making a Zuma presidency a fact. So, how did the same media respond to the ANC victory? They pretended that they were now back to business as usual, that nothing had really happened. The Mail & Guardian for April 24 2009 simply pretended to be neutral on its cover page by reverting to innocuous reports on the election and a possible Zuma cabinet. The only reminder that this paper and many other media outlets had been on a warpath against Zuma just days before was an opinion piece from Friends of Zuma website. But the piece was tucked away on Page 21. It was entitled "From Accused Number 1 to Mr President: After seven years of slander, will the media be fair in covering the Zuma administration?" The author of the piece, Ranjeni Munusamy, made several important observations. One was that the mass media in SA had not yet produced a factual profile or portrait of President Zuma for their readers. Such a profile would be regarded as a routine duty in most normal countries. The second critical point she made was that the mass media in SA had destroyed their own argument for media self-regulation because they never disciplined their own members who openly violated and abused media freedom. Munusamy concluded: "Here we have been bludgeoned for years with a portrayal of Zuma as a seedy, gun-toting character with a ‘shower’ on his head and an uncouth mob as his supporters." Yet 65,9 percent of voters in South Africa voted for this man and his party! How then can the same media claim that they respect, let alone promote and defend, democracy? Zimbabweans take a keen interest in attacks by the white-dominated Press on African leaders and African liberation movements. These attacks have a long history here. On June 12 2007, the white apartheid newspaper, The Citizen of South Africa, published a personal attack of President Robert Mugabe entitled "Bob snubs the clergy", which was authored anonymously but attributed to the CIA-funded Institute for War and Peace. On June 20 2007, neo-Rhodesian interests in the Sadc region released a bogus report in the name of the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum entitled "Injury in addition to insult" and calling for putting African leaders and the African land reclamation movement of Zimbabwe on trial for abusing the human rights of white settlers in the process of taking back stolen African land. Both documents were motivated by two white racist agendas: First to degrade and destroy the Pan-African hero stature of President Robert Mugabe in order to stop landless Africans in South Africa and Namibia from following Zimbabwe’s example; second, to mobilise British, North American, Australian and white South African funding for a programme to reverse the Zimbabwean land reform programmes under the guise of defending human rights. Yet African land reclamation is fundamental to national reconstruction and national healing. John Sprack in the International Defence and Aid Fund booklet Rhodesia: the Sixth Province of South Africa in 1976 demonstrated how the racist land tenures of South Africa and Rhodesia were central to the crime of apartheid: "The foundation of white supremacy in both Rhodesia and South Africa lies in the area of land policy, and in the labour policy which complements this. The two are interrelated and their development has followed a similar pattern in both countries. South Africa’s experience, because it both pre-dated similar processes in Rhodesia and provided several variations of a native policy" . . . furnished the main guidelines in the shaping of Rhodesian policy on land and labour . . . In both countries the (racist) allocation of land served a dual exploitive purpose. The white settlers’ first requirement was land for cultivation (and mineral speculation), their second labour to enable them to do this . . . The white demand for both land and labour was served by a policy of expropriation of land from the African peasantry." The United Nations Human Rights Commission was supposed to compile lists of organisations, institutions and individuals to be prosecuted for the crime of apartheid. As Professor Kader Asmal pointed in his legal paper on Namibia in September 1984, the prosecutions were supposed to lead to judgments for reparations and other forms of compensation to be paid to victims of apartheid throughout Southern Africa. Where member states of the UN or representatives of the victims could not agree on the reparations, the International Court of Justice was supposed to arbitrate. The former Rhodesian and former apartheid interests once invited by Archbishop Pius Ncube’s attacks on Zimbabwe aimed to turn up-side down the 1973 UN Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid. Between the two documents of June 12 and 20 2007, it was the first which clearly linked white South African interests to Archbishop Ncube and his hateful and highly personalised attacks on President Robert Mugabe. This hateful campaign moved to South Africa because the Pastoral Letter by the Zimbabwe Catholic Bishops’ Conference on the Current Crisis of Our Country (also called God Hears the Cry of the Oppressed) had been rejected by the majority of Zimbabwean Catholics who variously organised their expression of outrage against it. Zimbabweans, like the Friends of Zuma in South Africa, were concerned about many aspects of the attacks on their President. First, the basis of the attack on President Robert Mugabe as a person was that he was not entitled to differ with Archbishop Ncube, he should not differ with the archbishop, and he was not entitled to his own conscience and mind — all because early in his life "the church adopted Mugabe as their beloved son; fed him; and gave him an education that he would never have dreamed of, including a scholarship to study at Fort Hare University". Apart from the sordid attacks on the President’s parents as human beings in the anonymous article, this passage was the very heart of what was wrong with some of the leaders of the ZCBC in general and Archbishop Ncube in particular. The passage suggested that when the Catholic Church feeds, clothes, and educates needy children it sees them as being mortgaged and enslaved heart, intellect, conscience, soul and body and as being condemned forever to always agree with whomsoever happens to lead the Catholic Church at whatever level and on whatever subject. Otherwise, what would be the purpose and meaning of such an attack based on the President’s childhood as a Catholic? In the second place, when the President of Zimbabwe criticised Archbishop Ncube as an ordained minister of the church whose views and activities degraded and contradicted his call, there was nothing clandestine or anonymous about Cde Mugabe’s criticism. But the South African writers chose to remain anonymous. Third, the chosen channel for communicating the sordid and clandestine message was profound: One of the white racist media houses set up at the depth of apartheid in the 1970s as a special project of the apartheid regime under John Vorster and his junior Minister of Information Cornelius P. Mulder: The Citizen was indeed a soul-mate of Archbishop Ncube in his deranged mission to restore human rights in Zimbabwe by re-importing apartheid hatred from unreconstructed white institutions of South Africa. In the chapter called The Propaganda War in the book called (White) South Africa at War, author Richard Leonard lists The Citizen as a premier apartheid project under the sub-heading (Apartheid) Information Department Projects in South Africa, which projects were crafted with the assistance of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and the South African Bureau of State Security as the "bankers". The Citizen was project number one out of more than 30 internal projects of the apartheid regime started in 1976. Altogether there were more than 160 external and internal projects. According to Leonard: "The sponsorship of The Citizen, a daily newspaper, was the largest single secret project undertaken by the (Apartheid) Information Department. It cost the government US$36,8 million between 1976 and 1978. It was an internal project by which the (white) Nationalist government created its own mouthpiece in South Africa to counter the critical voices of the English language Press. The Apartheid roots of The Citizen and other white-dominated papers are not just an academic detail in arcane history. They are of contemporary relevance if we ask: How did The Citizen respond to the end of official apartheid in South Africa in the 1990s? That response serves to explain also why The Citizen would accept, for publication without question, a hateful and anonymous piece of trash claiming to represent Zimbabwe’s Day Catholics. In its Interim Report on the Inquiry into Racism in the (South African) Media, the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) tells us that The Citizen was naturally one of the white South African institutions which took the end of official Apartheid very badly. Now, Zimbabwe under President Robert Mugabe was not only a major contributor to ending Apartheid in South Africa and Namibia. Zimbabwe under President Mugabe went further to show, through the Third Chimurenga, how Apartheid on the land is supposed to be ended. So, The Citizen’s alliance with Archbishop Ncube cannot be a surprise, given the archbishop’s links to US, British, Rhodesian, and neo-Apartheid interests. The SAHRC reported that in 1999 The Citizen responded to the first African-led provincial government for Gauteng Province (where Johannesburg is) by going on a campaign of character assassination and criminalisation of the African leadership.

Πέμπτη 16 Απριλίου 2009

Why We Don't Condemn Our Pirates in Somalia


Why We Don't Condemn Our Pirates in Somalia--An Interview With K'Naan & Davy D
By K'Naan , URB MagazinePosted on April 14, 2009,
Can anyone ever really be for piracy? Outside of sea bandits, and young girls fantasizing of Johnny Depp, would anyone with an honest regard for good human conduct really say that they are in support of Sea Robbery? Well in Somalia, the answer is: it's complicated. The news media these days has been covering piracy in the Somali coast, with such lopsided journalism that it's lucky they're not on a ship themselves. It's true that the constant hijacking of vessels in the Gulf of Aden is a major threat to the vibrant trade route between Asia and Europe. It is also true that for most of the pirates operating in this vast shoreline, money is the primary objective. But according to many Somalis, the disruption of Europe's darling of a trade route is just Karma biting a perpetrator in the butt. And if you don't believe in Karma, maybe you believe in recent history. Here is why we Somalis find ourselves slightly shy of condemning our pirates.Somalia has been without any form of a functioning government since 1991. And despite its failures, like many other toddler governments in Africa, sprung from the wells of post-colonial independence, bad governance and development loan sharks, the specific problem of piracy was put in motion in 1992.After the overthrow of Siyad Barre, our charmless dictator of twenty-some odd years, two major forces of the Hawiye Clan came to power. At the time, Ali Mahdi, and General Mohamed Farah Aidid, the two leaders of the Hawiye rebels were largely considered liberators. But the unity of the two men and their respective sub-clans was very short-lived. It's as if they were dumbstruck at the advent of ousting the dictator, or that they just forgot to discuss who will be the leader of the country once they defeated their common foe. A disagreement of who will upgrade from militia leader to Mr. President broke up their honeymoon. It's because of this disagreement that we've seen one of the most devastating wars in Somalia's history, leading to millions displaced and hundreds of thousands dead. But war is expensive and militias need food for their families, and Jaad (an amphetamine-based stimulant) to stay awake for the fighting. Therefore a good clan-based Warlord must look out for his own fighters. Aidid's men turned to robbing aid trucks carrying food to the starving masses, and reselling it to continue their war. But Ali Mahdi had his sights set on a larger and more unexploited resource, namely: the Indian Ocean.Already by this time, local fishermen in the coastline of Somalia have been complaining of illegal vessels coming to Somali waters and stealing all the fish. And since there was no government to report it to, and since the severity of the violence clumsily overshadowed every other problem, the fishermen went completely unheard. But it was around this same time that a more sinister, a more patronizing practice was being put in motion. A Swiss firm called Achair Parterns, and an Italian waste company called Progresso, made a deal with Ali Mahdi, that they could dump containers of waste material in Somali waters. These European companies were said to be paying Warlords about $3 a ton, where as in to properly dispose of waste in Europe costs about $1000 a ton.In 2004, after Tsunami washed ashore several leaking containers, thousand of locals in the Puntland region of Somalia started to complain of severe and previously unreported ailments, such as abdominal bleeding, skin melting off and a lot of immediate cancer-like symptoms. Nick Nuttall, a spokesman for the United Nations Environmental Program, says that the containers had many different kinds of waste, including "Uranium, radioactive waste, lead, cadmium, mercury and chemical waste." But this wasn't just a passing evil from one or two groups taking advantage of our unprotected waters, the UN Convoy for Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, says that the practice still continues to this day. It was months after those initial reports that local fishermen mobilized themselves, along with street militias, to go into the waters and deter the Westerners from having a free pass at completely destroying Somalia's aquatic life. Now years later, that deterance has become less noble, and the ex-fishermen with their militias have begun to develop a taste for ransom at sea. This form of piracy is now a major contributor to the Somali economy, especially in the very region that private toxic waste companies first began to bury our nation's death trap.Now Somalia has upped the world's pirate attacks by ove r21 percent in one year, and while NATO and the EU are both sending forces to the Somali coast to try and slow down the attacks, Blackwater and all kinds of private security firms are intent on cashing in. But while Europeans are well in their right to protect their trade interest in the region, our pirates were the only deterrent we had from an externally imposed environmental disaster. No one can say for sure that some of the ships they are now holding for ransom were not involved in illegal activity in our waters. The truth is, if you ask any Somali if they think getting rid of the pirates only means the continuous rape of our coast by unmonitored Western vessels, and the production of a new cancerous generation, we would all fly our pirate flags high.It is time that the world gave the Somali people some assurance that these Western illegal activities will end, if our pirates are to seize their operations. We do not want the EU and NATO serving as a shield for these nuclear waste-dumping hoodlums. It seems to me that this new modern crisis is a question of justice, but also a question of whose justice. As is apparent these days, one man's pirate is another man's coast guard.K'naan is a Somali-Canadian poet, rapper and musician.
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Somalia: You Are Being Lied to About Pirates

also .. >> http://garizo.blogspot.com/2009/04/somali-lawmaker-describes-as-aggression.html
Who imagined that in 2009, the world's governments would be declaring a new War on Pirates? As you read this, the British Royal Navy - backed by the ships of more than two dozen nations, from the US to China - is sailing into Somalian waters to take on men we still picture as parrot-on-the-shoulder pantomime villains. They will soon be fighting Somalian ships and even chasing the pirates onto land, into one of the most broken countries on earth. But behind the arrr-me-hearties oddness of this tale, there is an untold scandal. The people our governments are labeling as "one of the great menace of our times" have an extraordinary story to tell — and some justice on their side. Pirates have never been quite who we think they are. In the "golden age of piracy" - from 1650 to 1730 - the idea of the pirate as the senseless, savage thief that lingers today was created by the British government in a great propaganda-heave. Many ordinary people believed it was false: pirates were often rescued from the gallows by supportive crowds. Why? What did they see that we can't? In his book Villains of All nations, the historian Marcus Rediker pores through the evidence to find out. If you became a merchant or navy sailor then - plucked from the docks of London's East End, young and hungry - you ended up in a floating wooden Hell. You worked all hours on a cramped, half-starved ship, and if you slacked off for a second, the all-powerful captain would whip you with the Cat O' Nine Tails. If you slacked consistently, you could be thrown overboard. And at the end of months or years of this, you were often cheated of your wages. Pirates were the first people to rebel against this world. They mutinied against their tyrannical captains - and created a different way of working on the seas. Once they had a ship, the pirates elected their captains, and made all their decisions collectively. They shared their bounty out in what Rediker calls "one of the most egalitarian plans for the disposition of resources to be found anywhere in the eighteenth century." They even took in escaped African slaves and lived with them as equals. The pirates showed "quite clearly - and subversively - that ships did not have to be run in the brutal and oppressive ways of the merchant service and the Royal navy." This is why they were popular, despite being unproductive thieves. The words of one pirate from that lost age - a young British man called William Scott - should echo into this new age of piracy. Just before he was hanged in Charleston, South Carolina, he said: "What I did was to keep me from perishing. I was forced to go a-pirating to live." In 1991, the government of Somalia - in the Horn of Africa - collapsed. Its nine million people have been teetering on starvation ever since - and many of the ugliest forces in the Western world have seen this as a great opportunity to steal the country's food supply and dump our nuclear waste in their seas. Yes: nuclear waste. As soon as the government was gone, mysterious European ships started appearing off the coast of Somalia, dumping vast barrels into the ocean. The coastal population began to sicken. At first they suffered strange rashes, nausea and malformed babies. Then, after the 2005 tsunami, hundreds of the dumped and leaking barrels washed up on shore. People began to suffer from radiation sickness, and more than 300 died. Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, the UN envoy to Somalia, tells me: "Somebody is dumping nuclear material here. There is also lead, and heavy metals such as cadmium and mercury - you name it." Much of it can be traced back to European hospitals and factories, who seem to be passing it on to the Italian mafia to "dispose" of cheaply. When I asked Ould-Abdallah what European governments were doing about it, he said with a sigh: "Nothing. There has been no clean-up, no compensation, and no prevention." (empasis added) At the same time, other European ships have been looting Somalia's seas of their greatest resource: seafood. We have destroyed our own fish-stocks by over-exploitation - and now we have moved on to theirs. More than $300m worth of tuna, shrimp, lobster and other sea-life is being stolen every year by vast trawlers illegally sailing into Somalia's unprotected seas. The local fishermen have suddenly lost their livelihoods, and they are starving. Mohammed Hussein, a fisherman in the town of Marka 100km south of Mogadishu, told Reuters: "If nothing is done, there soon won't be much fish left in our coastal waters." This is the context in which the men we are calling "pirates" have emerged. Everyone agrees they were ordinary Somalian fishermen who at first took speedboats to try to dissuade the dumpers and trawlers, or at least wage a 'tax' on them. They call themselves the Volunteer Coastguard of Somalia - and it's not hard to see why. In a surreal telephone interview, one of the pirate leaders, Sugule Ali, said their motive was "to stop illegal fishing and dumping in our waters... We don't consider ourselves sea bandits. We consider sea bandits to be those who illegally fish and dump in our seas and dump waste in our seas and carry weapons in our seas." William Scott would understand those words. No, this doesn't make hostage-taking justifiable, and yes, some are clearly just gangsters - especially those who have held up World Food Programme supplies. But the "pirates" have the overwhelming support of the local population for a reason. The independent Somalian news-site WardherNews conducted the best research we have into what ordinary Somalis are thinking - and it found 70 percent "strongly supported the piracy as a form of national defence of the country's territorial waters." During the revolutionary war in America, George Washington and America's founding fathers paid pirates to protect America's territorial waters, because they had no navy or coastguard of their own. Most Americans supported them. Is this so different? Did we expect starving Somalians to stand passively on their beaches, paddling in our nuclear waste, and watch us snatch their fish to eat in restaurants in London and Paris and Rome? We didn't act on those crimes - but when some of the fishermen responded by disrupting the transit-corridor for 20 percent of the world's oil supply, we begin to shriek about "evil." If we really want to deal with piracy, we need to stop its root cause - our crimes - before we send in the gun-boats to root out Somalia's criminals. The story of the 2009 war on piracy was best summarised by another pirate, who lived and died in the fourth century BC. He was captured and brought to Alexander the Great, who demanded to know "what he meant by keeping possession of the sea." The pirate smiled, and responded: "What you mean by seizing the whole earth; but because I do it with a petty ship, I am called a robber, while you, who do it with a great fleet, are called emperor." Once again, our great imperial fleets sail in today - but who is the robber?
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privateer was a private warship authorized by a country's government byletters of marque to attack foreign shipping. Strictly, a privateer was only entitled by its state to attack and rob enemy vessels during wartime. Privateers were part of naval warfare of some nations from the 16th to the 19th century. The crew of a privateer might be treated as prisoners of war by the enemy country if captured. The costs of commissioning privateers was borne by investors hoping to gain a significant return from prize money earned from enemy merchants.