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Where were you?

Daniel Brett | 10.11.2001 02:06

Anti-war protestors don't give a shit about Africa.

For the past three years, I have been campaigning to get the genocides in central Africa noticed. Three million people will murdered in the Congolese civil war and nearly one million were killed in Rwanda. The international community and all those moral upstarts in the anti-war campaign simply sat on their spotty behinds and did fuck all - apart from the Campaign Against the Arms Trade, of course. In fact, I heard certain 'left' groups praise Laurent Kabila for overthrowing Mobutu Sese Seko. The fact that the British arms trade was aiding the combatants only became an issue too late. Where were the 50,000-strong rallies, where were the rebel MPs, where were the entourage of activists, where were the Noam Chomskys, Vandana Shivas, Paul Foots and John Pilgers? I just think these 'peace activists' have jumped on a conveniant bandwagon jump-started by media attention. The African holocaust simply had no political capital for the superficial 'revolutionaries'.

Daniel Brett
- e-mail: dan@danielbrett.co.uk

Comments

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and ?

10.11.2001 08:51

So what do you suggest, surely not that we stop protesting against the war?? The answer is to expand the campaign rather than complain about past inadequacies.

mark


So many injustices, so much suffering

10.11.2001 12:15

Yes, and you can say this about many many tragedies.

What is different here (re september 11th) is that this has touched everyone. That is they have been directly and pers involved, and have had to confront a situation that suggests full on global war may occur.

Instead of saying where were you (which I can well understand), see this as THE opportunity to organise and campaign against ALL war and oppression.

You may feel bitter but don't let your anger prevent the bigger opportunity.

Peace.

we are everywhere


It's a question of PERSONAL responsibility

10.11.2001 14:55

Daniel,
When somebody acts differently in situations which the questioner considers the same, it is necessary to point out the moral difference. So I will attempt to explain. Lets take one of your examples.

When two ethnic groups in Rwanda seek to exterminate each other I might deplore this. It might be something for me to act upon, to attempt to be a peacemaker to save multitudes of human lives. But it's not my personal responsibility to do so. I am not killing anyone, I am not aiding one side to kill another, etc.

On the other hand, when it's MY people who are doing the killing (eg: like right now in Afganistan) then I do have resoponsibility for what is going on.

Does that make the difference clear enough?

Mike
mail e-mail: stepbystepfarm@shaysnet.com


hothing to do with us?

10.11.2001 22:39

In this world everything's to do with us - we are everywhere (tho I take your point) -

dwight heet


Arms trade

11.11.2001 20:12

David Icke is full of conspiracy theories, most of which are embarassing. The African genocide was not one of choice by Western powers, but neglected by everyone in the West because Africa is seen as uncivilised and barbaric. The barbarians are not just the murderers who massacred up to three million civilians in Congo, Rwanda and Burundi - although colonial powers were largely responsible for manipulating and entrenching ethnic divisions for their own benefit.

They were the arms dealers to sold to Zimbabwe, Angola, Uganda and Rwanda which all participating in killing to control timber and mining resources, even coffee. Despite CAAT's best efforts, parliament, the media and activists ignored this genocide, which was fuelled by the arms trade and unbridled capitalism. Some 'left-wing' groups even supported Laurent Kabila for overthrowing Mobuto Sese Seko, perceived as the lacky of the West. In doing so, they legitimated this violence.

A lot of people stood by and watched the blood of millions flowing down the Nyabarongo and Congo rivers and said nothing. A lot of people stood by and believed the media when they claimed that this was simply tribal warfare, as if this was an inevitable fact of life in Africa. A lot of people turned away as British, French and Belgian industry and commerce, from diamond merchants to arms manufacturers to mobile phone producers, made millions out of the genocide.

Whether British troops engaged in this war is irrelevant. The British stayed silent and let this continue. That's why I say peace activists have largely neglected Africa and I feel very angry about this.

Daniel Brett
mail e-mail: dan@danielbrett.co.uk