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Western Companies Exploiting Congo
by Justus Ogembo
29 May 2001 13:22 UTC
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The New York Times, Editorial, May 29, 2001


The Looting of Congo


From the depredations of Belgian colonial rule through the cold-war
kleptocracy of Mobutu Sese Seko, the vast Central African nation now called
Congo has been ransacked by foreigners and their African collaborators.
Africans and non-Africans alike have extracted diamonds, gold, copper,
timber, elephant tusks and other resources in a lawless commercial culture.
As both Secretary of State Colin Powell and members of the United Nations
Security Council have crisscrossed Africa in recent days to encourage the
withdrawal of foreign troops from Congo, a disturbing U.N. report offers
fresh evidence of the degree to which Congo's nearly three-year-old civil
war serves the economic interests of some of the West's staunchest African
allies and an array of foreign businesses.

The U.N. report documents in impressive detail the role of Rwanda, Uganda
and Burundi in the wholesale looting of eastern Congo. The panel concluded
that the leaders of Uganda and Rwanda, Yoweri Museveni and Paul Kagame, two
of Washington's allies during the Clinton administration, were "on the verge
of becoming godfathers of the illegal exploitation of natural resources and
the continuation of the conflict."

The panel did not accuse the two men of profiting personally. But it
properly held them accountable for failing to prevent their top generals,
relatives and associates, along with proxy rebels and warlords in regions
under their control, from profiting in league with criminal cartels and
foreign companies. Mr. Museveni has denounced the report and noted that it
overlooks the crimes of Uganda's main rivals in Congo. Angola, Zimbabwe and
Congo itself have likewise engaged in thievery.

But the U.N. report also makes clear that Africans have exploited Congo's
natural resources in league with reputable foreign companies and financial
institutions. Some three dozen businesses, based in Belgium, Germany,
Malaysia, Canada, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Britain, India, Pakistan and
Russia, are identified as having imported minerals from Congo through Uganda
and Rwanda.

The world must find ways to deter non-African companies and financial
institutions that are only too prepared to take advantage of Congo's misery.
An embargo on minerals, timber, gold or diamonds shipped from the states
whose forces currently occupy territory in Congo - states that would not
normally export large quantities of these resources - may be necessary.
Public and private financial institutions should reconsider doing business
with banks in Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi that have close ties with the
armies and rebel militias engaged in Congo. As many as 2.5 million Congolese
may have died from starvation and disease in eastern Congo. Legitimate
companies should have no business profiting from this catastrophe.




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