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Snow limiting aid to Arizona reservations

February 1st, 2010 No comments

News Article Monday, February 1, 2010

The following news article has been posted or forwarded in full, no material or data has altered or changed, please leave intact as is.

This news article can be located at the following web site link: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2010/02/01/Snow-limiting-aid-to-Arizona-reservations/UPI-75461265045816/

Snow limiting aid to Arizona reservations

HOLBROOK, Ariz., Feb. 1 (UPI) — American Indian reservations in Northern Arizona are cut off from road travel by heavy snowfall, prompting aerial deliveries to the region, officials say.

The Arizona Republic said Monday that snowdrifts up to 8 feet high are hindering road travel in Arizona’s Apache, Coconino and Navajo counties.

Eric Neitzel, a spokesman for a multi-agency emergency task force in Arizona, said as of the end of last week, nearly 100 supply missions into the three counties had taken place.

Two weeks of thunderstorms brought heavy snow to the counties, including a foot of snow falling on the region last Thursday.

To date, victims left stranded by the inclement weather have received more than 22,000 meals, 125 cots, 2,500 blankets and nearly 27,000 gallons of water.

Tribal officials at Hopi reservations in the region told the Republic that reservation residents have been plagued by collapsing roofs and power outages because of the recent weather.

The poor weather conditions have also grounded a number of supply drops to stranded residents, including 25 helicopter missions reportedly scrapped last Friday.

Posted/Forward by: Larry Kibby – l.kibby@frontier.com Reznews Radio Video’s – updated on a regular basis http://ubroadcast.com/channel/reznews

Material appearing here is distributed without profit or monitory gain to those who have expressed an interest in receiving the material for research and educational purposes. This is in accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. section 107. http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html

REPUBLICANS VS. THE MILITARY

February 1st, 2010 4 comments

REPUBLICANS VS. THE MILITARY…. For much of the Bush-Cheney era, Republican leaders characterized themselves as more than just allies of the military establishment, but also deferential to the military’s judgment on national security matters. “Listen to the commanders on the ground” became a common adage in GOP circles. But over the last year or so, it’s become increasingly apparent that it’s President Obama and his team that are aligned with the military establishment, leaving Republicans at odds with the brass they used to revere. CNN’s John King asked Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) _an interesting question_ (http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1001/31/sotu.01.html) yesterday about trying terrorist suspects in criminal courts, as has long been in the norm. KING: If you ask the White House about this, it highlights — they say it’s not just the president, it’s not just Attorney General Holder, that General David Petraeus says he believes a public trial at a federal courthouse is the best way to do it so that it’s not an al Qaeda recruiting tool. That Secretary Gates, a holdover from the Bush administration at the Defense Department, also they believes a trial in the federal court system is preferable to a closed trial in the military commission. And that the CIA operatives leading the fight against these guys in Yemen, in Somalia, in Afghanistan and elsewhere, also believe that if you did it in a closed setting in a military commission it would be a powerful recruiting tool. If General Petraeus, Secretary Gates, and the intelligence leaders say, do it in court, why do you say that’s a bad idea? MCCONNELL: I simply disagree and so do the American people. Keep in mind, it wasn’t too terribly long ago that Democratic politicians simply weren’t supposed to say that Petraeus, Gates, and intelligence leaders were wrong about national security matters. Indeed, for Dems to say that they knew better than Petraeus, Gates, and intelligence leaders — that their judgment was superior to military leaders’ — was grounds for mockery, if not condemnation. And yet, Obama has spent a year following the guidance of military leaders, and Republicans _have spent a year_ (http://theplumline.whorunsgov.com/torture/gop-leaders-national-security-attacks-on-obama-increasingly-at-odds-with -defense-professionals/) breaking with the judgment of the military establishment. It’s a fascinating dynamic. On everything from civilian trials to Gitmo to torture, we have two distinct groups — GOP leaders, the Cheneys, Limbaugh, and conservative activists on one side; President Obama, Gen. Petraeus, Secretary Gates, Colin Powell, Adm. Mullen, Adm. Blair, and Gen. Jones on the other. To be sure, endorsements do not necessarily reflect merit. Obama’s position on any national security issue can enjoy support from the likes of Petraeus, Powell, Mullen, et al, but all of them can be collectively wrong. It’s lazy to think the president is right just because David Petraeus and Colin Powell say he’s right. But that’s not the point here. McConnell and his Republicans cohorts are reluctant to admit it, and political insiders have been slow to acknowledge it, but what we’re witnessing is exceedingly rare — the Republican establishment openly rejecting the judgment of the military establishment. Imagine if the situations were reversed, and Democratic lawmakers were on the opposite side of the Commander in Chief, the Centcom commander, the Republican Defense Secretary, and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs — in the midst of two wars. Might we hear a little more talk about why Dems were at odds with the U.S. military establishment? And if so, why isn’t the GOP break with the military a bigger deal?—_Steve Benen_ (mailto:sbenen@washingtonmonthly.com) 8:30 AM _Permalink_ (http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2010_02/022183.php)

“Our ‘neoconservatives’ are neither new nor conservative, but old as Babylon and evil as Hell”. -Edward Abbey

Categories: United States Tags: ,

Uganda: Human Rights 2009-2010

February 1st, 2010 2 comments

Uganda: Human Rights 2009-2010

January 25, 2010 in Uganda

*January 2009. Uganda*

*Human Rights Watch, Events of 2009*

*HRW World Report 2010*

Impunity, corruption, and the erosion of independent institutions obstruct the protection of human rights in Uganda; government efforts in 2009 to tackle these shortcomings were weak. With parliamentary and presidential elections scheduled for early 2011, the ruling party faced increased criticism from the opposition for failing to deliver electoral law reform or address the perceived partiality of the Electoral Commission, voter disenfranchisement, and incumbents’ use of state resources during campaigning.

Political tensions between the central government and the Buganda kingdom exploded in violent demonstrations that rocked Kampala for two days in September, leaving at least 27 dead. Members of the opposition and media faced criminal charges for speaking before and after the events about the president’s governance and the use of lethal force to quell rioters. No members of the security forces were charged. The government forced four Luganda-language radio stations off the air.

Extra-territorial military operations by Ugandan armed forces to defeat the long-running Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) insurgency led to some LRA combatants being captured. But civilians paid a heavy price in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), southern Sudan, and the Central African Republic, the LRA killing over 1,000 civilians and abducting hundreds across these three countries in “revenge” attacks. Ugandan military operations have consistently failed to protect civilians adequately, leaving hundreds of thousands displaced and without reliable access to humanitarian aid.

*Extrajudicial Killings, Torture, and Arbitrary Detention*

During the September riots, those supporting the king of the Baganda blocked roads and burned government property. Police and military fired live ammunition at rioters, bystanders, and people hiding in their homes. The use of lethal force by government forces drew criticism, but no one was held to account for the 27 deaths. Government officials blamed the media and the rioters for inciting violence. Hundreds were arrested in police operations marked by brutality. Twenty-three rioters who allegedly destroyed government property were charged with terrorism.

Separately, in 2009, Human Rights Watch documented unlawful arrests, illegal detention, torture, and extrajudicial killing of alleged treason and terrorism suspects by the Joint Anti Terrorism Task Force (JATT). The Ugandan armed forces and parliament publicly committed to carrying out investigations, but no action has so far been taken and reports of abuses continue.

Lawyers for five individuals “disappeared” by JATT filed habeas corpus petitions in July. Human Rights Watch research had previously established that JATT had held all five incommunicado for months without charge. The High Court ordered that JATT produce the five before the court, but in defiance of the ruling the government failed to produce the suspects and argued that they had recently reported to the Amnesty Commission. The five were ultimately granted amnesty and released, allegedly having admitted to rebel activity. The High Court questioned the voluntariness of their confessions and requests for amnesty, and ruled that the amnesty was unlawful because of their illegal detention.

In April and May government forces arrested 14 people in northern Uganda, mistreating and detaining them without charge at the JATT headquarters for several weeks. After a habeas petition was filed, the 14 were produced in court and accused of membership in a previously unknown rebel group. All remain in custody at this writing, charged with treason.

The minister of justice failed to address the legal status of 12 individuals who were under age 18 when they committed crimes that qualify for the death penalty if committed by an adult. The prisoners were convicted, but were given no sentence and should have been placed in appropriate juvenile care. Some have been held for over eight years while awaiting the minister’s orders. The ministry blamed the courts for failing to turn over the appropriate reports.

*Lord’s Resistance Army*

Efforts to negotiate an end to the war between the LRA and the government remained on hold after LRA leader Joseph Kony failed to sign an agreed peace deal in 2008. While relative calm continued to prevail in northern Uganda, the LRA committed grave human rights abuses in the DRC, Central African Republic, and southern Sudan. Some of the worst attacks took place in December 2008 and January 2009 following the launch of Operation Lightning Thunder, a regional military assault on the LRA in the DRC led by the Ugandan military. A Human Rights Watch investigation documented how more than 865 civilians were killed and at least 160 children were abducted during these attacks. When the Ugandan military scaled back operations in March, civilian protection was largely left to the Congolese army and United Nations peacekeepers, and LRA killings and abductions of civilians continued in the DRC’s Orientale province. (See also DRC chapter.)

The Ugandan government took preliminary steps to establish a special division of Uganda’s High Court to prosecute serious crimes in violation of international law, as proposed during the LRA peace talks. Parliament introduced legislation to domesticate the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court in Uganda and establish the war crimes division.

*Freedom of Assembly and Expression*

In August police beat and detained members of the opposition, Forum for Democratic Change, who were demonstrating in Kampala against extensions of office terms for the chairman and commissioners of the Electoral Commission, despite accusations of election malpractice. Several demonstrators were arrested and charged with organizing an illegal assembly. Throughout the year the police tried to block peaceful demonstrations and assembly in several other parts of the country.

The government’s clampdown on freedom of expression intensified in 2009, especially after the September riots. Although the constitutionality of sedition has been pending before the Constitutional Court since 2005, police continue to use the charge to harass journalists and opposition leaders. Opposition members Erias Lukwago and Medard Segona were charged with inciting violence and sedition for statements made on a radio program. Unknown security operatives arrested and beat prominent journalist Robert Kalundi Sserumaga after he criticized the president’s upbringing on television; Sserumaga was charged with six counts of sedition. By October at least 17 journalists had pending criminal charges against them for charges such as forgery, criminal defamation, sedition, and promoting sectarianism. All are free on bail, awaiting trial.

Government officials told television stations to stop broadcasting live pictures of the security forces’ response to the riots. In some instances, security agents forcibly removed video footage from TV stations, and appropriated journalists’ cameras so they could delete images of dead bodies. Police also beat some journalists who attempted to report on unfolding events, and some were detained and interrogated for their coverage of the riots. President Yoweri Museveni accused radio station CBS (part-owned by the Buganda kingdom) of running a sustained campaign against his government, and through its regulatory body, the Broadcasting Council, the government closed down CBS and three other radio stations: they were accused of inciting violence and promoting sectarianism, but had no notification or opportunity to appeal the Council’s decision. The Council also banned a TV program and its host, and pressured some stations to dismiss journalists who were critical of the government’s response to the riots.

*Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity*

At least four people were arrested for alleged homosexual activity and charged with either sodomy or “carnal knowledge against the order of nature.”

The Anti-Homosexuality Bill, tabled for discussion in parliament in October, prohibits all homosexuality, making it punishable by a fine and a maximum prison sentence of 10 years, or both. The bill further prohibits the “promotion” of homosexuality through advocacy on sexual minority rights, threatening the activities of any human rights group.

*HIV/AIDS*

Uganda’s draft HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Bill mandates HIV testing of pregnant women, their partners, and other specified populations, and criminalizes the intentional transmission (or attempted transmission) of HIV. In addition, the bill grants health practitioners the power to notify sexual partners (and those “in close and continuous contact”) of a person living with HIV of that person’s sero-status, and criminalizes a wide range of conduct related to failure to follow medical orders or follow “safe procedures.” Arbitrary or selective enforcement of the bill could restrict broad freedoms and undermine effective HIV prevention and treatment approaches that rely upon outreach to and empowerment of affected communities.

*Key International Actors*

Uganda’s aid donors privately expressed concern about ongoing cases of torture and illegal detention by security forces, but did not speak out publicly to condemn abuses.

(wrong move)..MK

Warrants issued by the International Criminal Court for LRA leaders in 2005 remain outstanding. The United States provided material and intelligence assistance to the Uganda-led offensive in December 2008, but failed to adequately provide or plan for civilian protection. In May 2009 members of the US Congress introduced legislation requiring the Obama administration to develop a multilateral strategy to apprehend LRA leaders; the legislation is currently under review. Other actors – including the United Kingdom, the European Union, and the United Nations – failed to take effective steps toward the apprehension of LRA leaders under ICC warrant, although some expressed concern over ongoing LRA abuses. Ads by Google Human Rights Watch <s-p: Go to www.ngo-monitor.org> Who runs Human Rights Watch? Are their reports credible? www.ngo-monitor.org <s-p: Go to www.ngo-monitor.org>

Categories: Middle East Tags: , ,

Portuguese to English translation 01/02/2010 13.07.38 KISANGANI: RELIGIOUS LEADERS CONFERENCE ON ART …kong mito dano odel Nguny gii ..wun waci ni pe wunyang piny!!

February 1st, 2010 No comments

Portuguese to English translation 01/02/2010 13.07.38

Portuguese to English translation 01/02/2010 13.07.38

KISANGANI: RELIGIOUS LEADERS CONFERENCE ON ART

Kisangani, 1st Feb (RV) – The archbishop of Kisangani in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Archbishop Marcel Utembi Tapa, promotes a conference between the country’s religious leaders to discuss the attitudes of the Ugandan rebels of the Army Lord’s Resistance (LRA) in eastern DRC.

The event will take place in Kisangani, from 2 to 4 of this month, and with the participation of Catholic Bishops, Anglican and Protestant pastors from Uganda, Sudan, Central African Republic and DRC.

According to Sun Utembi, the conference organized with the support of Pax Christi International, will help religious leaders to earnestly consider the question of the LRA. Religious leaders discuss the light of their experience and the help that can be offered to the State to restore peace.

The LRA was founded in the late 80s in northern Uganda. It is sadly famous because of the atrocities perpetrated against the civilian population. The rebels set fire to homes, massacred the population, maim, rape and steal children to become soldiers and sex slaves.

Five years ago the group also acts in southern Sudan, in north-eastern DRC and southern Central African Republic. (MJ)

Kisangani, 1st Feb (RV) – The archbishop of Kisangani in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Archbishop Marcel Utembi Tapa, promotes a conference between the country’s religious leaders to discuss the attitudes of the Ugandan rebels of the Army Lord’s Resistance (LRA) in eastern DRC.

The event will take place in Kisangani, from 2 to 4 of this month, and with the participation of Catholic Bishops, Anglican and Protestant pastors from Uganda, Sudan, Central African Republic and DRC.

According to Sun Utembi, the conference organized with the support of Pax Christi International, will help religious leaders to earnestly consider the question of the LRA. Religious leaders discuss the light of their experience and the help that can be offered to the State to restore peace.

The LRA was founded in the late 80s in northern Uganda. It is sadly famous because of the atrocities perpetrated against the civilian population. The rebels set fire to homes, massacred the population, maim, rape and steal children to become soldiers and sex slaves.

Five years ago the group also acts in southern Sudan, in north-eastern DRC and southern Central African Republic. (MJ)

Monday Afternoon Reznews Delivery

February 1st, 2010 No comments

Monday Afternoon Reznews Delivery February 1, 2010 Posted by: Larry Kibby – l.kibby@frontier.com Reznews Video’s – Updated on a regular basis http://ubroadcast.com/channel/reznews

General & Important Informational News

Snow limiting aid to Arizona reservations UPI.com 1 (UPI) — American Indian reservations in Northern Arizona are cut off from road travel by heavy snowfall, prompting aerial deliveries to the region…

Jack Brisco dead at 68 CANOE He was born Freddie Joe Brisco on September 21, 1941, in in Blackwell, Oklahoma, and a star wrestler at Oklahoma State, becoming the first Native American….

Documentary captures composer’s mission Tulsa Native American Times From landmark arts and culture institutions such as New York’s Lincoln Center and the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, to Native tribal…

Nonfiction Reviews Publishers Weekly (May) Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History SC Gwynne….

Education, Culture & Religious News

National American University Approved to Offer Nursing Program in South Dakota Earthtimes (press release) The Clarkson Family Foundation has created a scholarship program for Native American students who are enrolled in these courses at the campus…

SYMBOLIC DEBATE | An effort to get schools to drop Indian mascots has not advanced The Register-Guard “He said, ‘I’m proud of my heritage, I’m proud that you continue to honor Native American culture and that you’re naming your team after a teenage warrior….

Environmental toxins and learning disorders NorthJersey.com They were all members of the Yaqui Indian tribe and were thus similar in terms of genetics, diet, education and social and cultural influences…

Archaeology, History & Preservation News

Old Medford skull keeps its secrets KTVZ Its shape indicated that the woman was either Asian or Native American, but everything else about the skull remains unknown. Medford police closed the case…

Tribal, Government & Political News

Senate panel hears testimony on collecting Indian cigarette taxes Legislative Gazette George E. Pataki to excuse the collection of sales and excise taxes on fuel and cigarettes sales at and to American Indian reservations…

Obama budget would boost national security funds for FBI, Justice Dept. Washington Post … programs to help prisoners reenter their communities; and $19 million for the FBI to hire 45 new agents to combat crime on American Indian reservations….

More Wood for the Fire CounterPunch The post 9-11 farce of National Security has been used as a pretext to increase policing and forced relocations against Native American nations that…

Reservation Crime & Tribal/Court News

Indian Gaming & Reservation/AI Business News

Museum, Events & Pow-wow News

Kwahadi Dancers 44th Annual Winter Nights Ceremonials KFDA Performances will take place in the kiva at the Kwahadi Museum of the American Indian, located at 9121 I-40 E (Exit #76, then west ½ on I-40 frontage road)….

In Pictures: ’52nd Annual Grammy Awards’ Monsters and Critics.com EPA/ANDREW GOMBERT Native American musician Bill Miller hold up his award for ‘Best Native American Music Album’ at the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards at the….

01/02/2010Berlin noise: February’s hottest concerts Expatica Germany This month: legendary Native American singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie stops by with her new comeback album; Vancouverite noise pop phenoms Japandroids….

Native American festival returns to its roots Verde Independent By Steve Ayers CAMP VERDE – Last year’s Festival of Native American Culture was a huge success, but from the viewpoint of its creator, something was missing…

An Early Pioneer In The Area of Diversity The Metropolitan Coporate Counsel Willert: We do not have special programs for Native Americans per se, but we have perhaps one of the strongest, if not the strongest, Native American…

Material appearing here is distributed without profit or monitory gain to those who have expressed an interest in receiving the material for research and educational purposes. This is in accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. section 107. http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html

Lutalo:How can we contribute money to CBSfm satellite technology?

February 1st, 2010 1 comment

Lutalo Delta Research,inc reveals that Buganda Kingdom has taken 41.2% of Central Government responsibility in the Central Region in ensuring that people receive reliable and worthy services they need more saw paving a free condition for the Children of Uganda acquire Education which will result in a more production an…d expansion of Uganda’s output in order to avoid Brain Drain out of Africa,

In Agriculture Buganda Kingdom is far a head of NAADS commitments because it understands the needful and potential of Ugandan People,The FDC Party is committed to work with the People of Buganda with Population of 8 Million and its Cultural Administration.

Lutalo Delta Research,inc Reveals the People of Uganda &Buganda will contribute 80,000 US$ for CBS Radio to be linked to Africa’s Satellite Digital Line Gateway to leave the Analogue for Uganda Broadcasting Council.The Intelsat V1F8 running from Est to Wast in the Latitudinal line of Equator will help in Transmission of Signals with more than 24.6…

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 10:45 PM, abbey semuwemba < abbeysemuwemba@googlemail.com> wrote:

akini yaa dde zelle gizzu…me murra dee oji saro saro….John Norris: Dispatch from Congo: ‘We Are Bei ng Exterminated’

February 1st, 2010 No comments

John Norris: Dispatch from Congo: ‘We Are Being Exterminated’ January 27th, 2010 | Author: John Norris

Many of the stories Enough ’s field researchers hear while immersed in their work in some of the world’s worst conflict zones don’t make it into our policy reports, press releases, and Congressional testimony. Indeed, as each field researcher can attest, some of the most compelling stories and interactions come at the most unexpected times. We created Enough’s Field Dispatch series to capture just that type of story – one that may not fit in directly with a policy paper but offers real illumination and insights into the situation on the ground.

Enough’s Ledio Cakaj filed this new field dispatch from northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo, a region terrorized by a marauding band of fighters known as the Lord’s Resistance Army.

*HAUT UELE DISTRICT, Province Orientale, Democratic Republic of Congo* — A resurgent LRA is terrorizing the population in the Haut Uele region of northeast Congo. Congolese soldiers deployed to the region have been unable to provide adequate protection and the number of UN peacekeepers in the area remains woefully inadequate. But better coordinated and resourced efforts by both Congolese and international security forces have the potential to protect civilians from LRA attacks. This is the second of two dispatches based on my visit to Haut Uele.

*The Congolese Army in Haut Uele*

The Congolese army has deployed close to 6,000 soldiers in Province Orientale, but they have utterly failed to protect civilians from LRA attacks. Most of the LRA attacks have taken place around three places — Ngilima, Bangadi and Niangara — where there is a significant army presence. In Bangadi, for example, there are at least 100 Congolese soldiers. Yet, Bangadi has been frequently attacked by the LRA in the last few months. In personal accounts, people in Bangadi report that Congolese soldiers simply do not respond when alerted to LRA attacks. Similarly, people in Ngilima said that the soldiers are too scared to confront the LRA; they say they have never seen a LRA rebel killed or captured by the Congolese soldiers. “The only time the [Congolese army] fights the LRA is when they happen to come across them by accident,” said a local official.

In many interviews Congolese civilians accused Congolese soldiers of preying on the local population. Notoriously unpaid and unfed, soldiers steal from civilians, often by force at checkpoints along the main roads. “It is a daily occurrence,” said a local NGO worker. “Civilians are either forced to pay or forced to work for the soldiers at checkpoints such as collecting wood or cleaning their boots and washing their uniforms.” Lacking vehicles, Congolese soldiers needing to walk to their duty stations force locals to transport them on their bicycles or steal their bicycles at gunpoint. The stealing of bicycles is so common that the residents of Ngilima, in anticipation of a Congolese army troop rotation, declared December 27 as the “day without bicycles” and hid their bicycles from Congolese soldiers.

There are many cases of rape and sexual violence committed by the Congolese army. In Ngilima, we heard from the local population that there are consistently about six to eight rapes reported per month that are attributed to Congolese soldiers. Many more rapes go unreported. Killings also occur, mostly when civilians refuse to hand over their possessions to Congolese soldiers. An internal U.N. report cited eight killings of civilians by the Congolese army in Haut Uele during the month of November, with another four people injured. In Bangadi, we saw a Congolese soldier cut a civilian with a bayonet, because the civilian, who was driving a motorcycle, refused to give the soldier a ride to his barracks.

In interviews, a variety of Congolese army officials denied all abuses. According to the commander of the FARDC battalion in Bangadi, Congolese soldiers have never committed any crimes against the civilian population. The commander of the troops based in Ngilima said the population was lying. The FARDC troop commander in Dungu recognized that abuses had taken place but added that these were isolated incidents. “These are the problems of the man,” he said. “Not of the organization.”

Representatives from Congolese civil society organizations said that abuses had occurred where there was a clear lack of good leadership. They believe that the Congolese army and government should ensure command responsibility. Civil society members have also asked the United Nations mission in Congo, or MONUC, to condition aid to the army on good behavior. At the moment, MONUC supports Congolese soldiers in Province Orientale by providing daily rations for 6,000 soldiers and gasoline for seven army vehicles. MONUC officials said it was difficult for them to interfere in the internal affairs of the Congolese national army.

*The role of the United Nations*

The mandate for the United Nations mission in DRC, or MONUC, clearly prioritizes civilian protection, but their presence is thinly stretched in Haut Uele. A battalion of Moroccan peacekeepers is trying to offer protection to civilians but they have been unable to establish a presence in the worst affected areas. Promised reinforcements, in the shape of a Tunisian battalion, were supposed to arrive in June of 2009, but this was pushed back to February 2010. There are also fears that the Tunisians could then be deployed to neighboring Equateur Province, site of recent fighting between the Congolese army and a new rebel group.

The lack of peacekeepers to protect humanitarian convoys has forced aid groups to cease assistance to people in areas targeted by the LRA. After a series of LRA attacks on Congolese civilians who had just received food aid, and fearing attacks against their staff, U.N. and humanitarian organizations decided to stop the distribution of food in adherence to the “Do No Harm” principle. “Ideally we would need U.N. peacekeepers or Congolese soldiers to stay in the communities at least two weeks after the distribution of food,” said an international aid worker. “But there are not enough U.N. troops and the FARDC cannot be trusted.” As a result, many are starving. “We are being exterminated by the LRA and from hunger,” a resident of Bangadi told Enough.

Where present, U.N. peacekeepers have generally acted as a deterrent to LRA attacks. It is telling, for instance, that LRA attacks occur largely in Bangadi, Ngilima and Niangara where there are no U.N. troops. Furthermore, a U.N. presence also almost always guarantees that Congolese soldiers are better behaved. This is the case, for instance, in Dungu, but also in Faradje where the U.N. presence is small. A Faradje local reports that Congolese soldiers behave much better when conducting joint patrols with U.N. peacekeepers. This is not the case when Congolese soldiers are alone.

MONUC troops have both the will and the means to protect civilians. In a response to indications that the LRA were planning to attack civilians during Christmas this December, MONUC troops deployed to Ngilima. Internal U.N. reports mention a thwarted LRA attack on December 25 as a result of joint MONUC-Congolese army patrols. MONUC deployment to Ngilima is, however, temporary and the troops are expected to leave soon.

Many agree that a MONUC troop increase would go a long way towards protecting civilians in northeastern DRC. A U.N. source said in an interview that U.N. workers had been requesting a troop increase for a long time. “Gaye [General Gaye, MONUC force commander] promised us long ago that he would send more troops here,” the source said. “So far he has not kept that promise.”

*John Norris is Executive Director of Enough, the anti-genocide project at the Center for American Progress in Washington, D.C. Ledio Cakaj is an Enough field researcher based in Kampala, Uganda.*

texting from dungu..”LRA” spotted in dungu!!

February 1st, 2010 No comments

ily Deschanel, Actress, Activist, and start of TV’s “Bones”, writes about A Thousand Sisters… The Mango Tree Rebellion » People w/machetes aren’t happy – Dungu Txt Updates

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Key: Congolese Army = FARDC; UN in Congo = MONUC; Bamokandi = outlying neighborhood of Dungu (on the other side of the river from the center of town).

– LRA spotted inside Dungu yet again Tuesday morning, 7 a.m. No Attack. about 20 hours ago

– Five of them hunkered down in a cemetery, watching, then crossed the road and disappeared into the bush. about 20 hours ago from txt

– Scouting another attack? FARDC patrolling the main roads, but it would be EASY for them to attack the neighborhood they hit a few weeks ago. about 20 hours ago from txt

– They’re obviously scouting where FARDC is/ is not. Visited site of attack today. It was 1 pm so okay. But I bet they’ll be back before we leave. We’re on it.

– FARDC stoking rumors MONUC is supporting LRA (UN seen carrying civilians with guns – think its IRA) Jan 28, 1:21 PM Pacific Time

– Locals are SO ANGRY at FARDC, Kabila, and the UN. No protection anywhere. about 20 hours ago from txt

– Interviewed 12 year old girl today- Mado- just rescued from 8 months held captive by LRA. Shot in the leg- recovering now. about 20 hours ago from txt

– Also interviewed 2 men recovering from machete wounds to head and back, incurred during LRA attacks over the weekend. about 20 hours ago from txt

– And unbraided Koko’s hair, learned how to pound, de-husk rice! What a day in Congo! about 20 hours ago from txt

– It’s getting sketchy here in town. FARDC stoking rumors MONUC is supporting LRA. about 4 hours ago from txt

– Citizens near riots, cutting down mango trees, blocking MONUC access to Bamokandi (and airport). We’re in lock down on this side of town. about 4 hours ago from txt

– Koko’s family on other side of bridge. Can’t see them today. Hanging out at mission. Working on bringing Mama Koko back over here. about 4 hours ago from txt

– Paranoia. 2 FARDC soldiers claim they saw the UN drop 6 armed civilians next to the forest. People think it was the LRA – hence the upset. about 1 hour ago from txt

– The problem – just heard from mayor FARDC is known to make up stories to provoke upset. If so, it worked. about 1 hour ago from txt

– Now everyone I’ve talked with today believes the LRA is sponsored by the UN. Hence the mango tree riots. That, my friends, is the face of instability. Crazy. about 1 hour ago from txt

– Never mind the airport road – now the FARDC is all over the center of town, winding people up, stoking the fire. According to Koko’s brother. about 1 hour ago from txt

– I want to go into town center to see what’s happening, but Koko’s family thinks a wound-up crowd could easily mistake a white girl for MONUC . about 1 hour ago from txt

– Getting serious Koko’s brother just reported residents of Bamokandi are guarding the road to the airport w/ machetes, guns, spears about 1 hr ago from txt

– People are all the way too the Mama Koko’s place and past, up to the bridge into town w/machetes and guns, etc. Jan 29 3:19 pm Dungu time

– Saying if MONUC and FARDC won’t protect them, they’ll protect themselves. Jan 29, 3:20 pm Dungu time

– The UN Base by the airport. That’s the point of the protest. Block the UN from that road since they support the LRA. They’ll run out of water. We’ll protect ourselves. Jan 29, 3:31 pm Dungu time

– Koko says its for my safety we’re hunkered down here. She could go home, but doesn’t want to see people w/ machetes. She’s seen it before (in rwanda). Jan 29, 3:37 pm Dungu time

– “People with machetes aren’t happy. It’s not a good time. ” Jan 29, 3:37 pm Dungu time

Posted in News 4 Responses to “People w/machetes aren’t happy – Dungu Txt Updates”

1. Eileen says: January 29, 2010 at 7:30 am

Hoping you and Koko are safe… 2. Robin says: January 29, 2010 at 4:35 pm

I too, am hoping and praying for your safety…. 3. Mboligihe says: January 30, 2010 at 4:19 am

It is so annoying to read that it is paranoia the facts which are taking place.Mutilated people lying in Dungu general hospital is paranoia.Sloughtered man mournned at Dungu may is a paranoia.Thousands of my fellow men in the bush is a real paranoia.Bodies decaying in the push in Niangara is paranoia. 4. Ann Shannon says: January 30, 2010 at 8:14 pm

Lisa has never said there is no justification for people’s terror. She is well aware of the real basis the terror has and of the unspeakable horrors that people are suffering throughout the region due to the LRA. Fear naturally generalizes, though; it feeds back on itself. It grips the individual and the collective. In a heightened state of fear, it is natural to look for someone, anyone to blame. And when that happens, people are easily manipulated by others with an agenda — and there are always plenty of those around. The people of Dungu have every right to be outraged that FARDC and the UN are not more adequately protecting them, that their government has abandoned them. But they are also vulnerable to being easily manipulated — Just as Americans are when they are consumed by fear and anger. It is a universal dynamic. And there are always plenty of opportunists around to take advantage of people in that state. It is one of the ways that terror works.

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National Wear Red Day

February 1st, 2010 No comments

Monday, February 1, 2010

Friday, February 5, 2010 is National Wear Red Day

Use Your Heart and Your Head to Prevent Heart Disease

February is American Heart Month and the first Friday in February is National Wear Red Day®. Wear red on Friday, February 5, for heart disease awareness. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in women (and men) and there is something you can do about it. CDC wants to remind you to take steps to lower your risk for heart disease.

Use your heart and your head: eat healthy be smoke-free be active get your check-ups

My effort here in posting this Awareness, is to remind folks that Indian Country is very well of Heart Disease and its impact on the lives of our people and therefore, I strongly believe and urge everyone that we in Indian Country should do our part to help bring awareness to our people.

This post email sent by: Larry Kibby – l.kibby@frontier.com Elko, Nevada 89801

Material appearing here is distributed without profit or monitory gain to those who have expressed an interest in receiving the material for research and educational purposes. This is in accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. section 107. http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html

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interesting!!

February 1st, 2010 No comments

*Uganda Article Index : Current 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 * Geography Latest News Most Read Most Commented Hot Topics *SUBMARINES: The Greatest Generation*

*IRAQ: Auctioning Off The Secret Police*

*MORALE: Video Games Make You Smarter And Faster*

*LEADERSHIP: Such Good Frenemies*

*SUPPORT: Let Your Fingers Do The Stalking*

*AFGHANISTAN: Armed And Ready To Rumble*

*LOGISTICS: So Much Stuff, So Little Time*

*UGANDA: All Together Now*

*WARPLANES: Most Of The F-22ski Flies*

*STRATEGIC WEAPONS: Late But Successful*

*SEA TRANSPORTATION: The Joint High Speed Vessel Fleet*

*ARTILLERY: The Indian Light Artillery*

*MORALE: The Haiti Bonus*

*RUSSIA: Chemical Warfare*

*ELECTRONIC WEAPONS: Not Your Grandfathers AH-1*

*LOGISTICS: God Bless And Keep The Himalayas*

*PROCUREMENT: Thailand Keeps Up*

*INFORMATION WARFARE: Over Two Billion Served*

*LEADERSHIP: Get By With A Lot Of Help From Your Friends*

*SUBMARINES: The Cursed Subs Of Oz*

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All Together NowFebruary 1, 2010: The government is warning its opponents to refrain from exploiting tribal divisions in upcoming elections. The politically correct word in Uganda is “sectarianism,” but instead of referring to religious differences it means tribal differences (though religion can be involved as well). That said, a number of government opponents continually point out that many key government jobs have gone to people who are from west Uganda and have close personal ties to the president.

January 29, 2010: Uganda faces its own domestic election discontent, with rhetoric reflecting some of the same doubts voiced in South Sudan about Sudan’s upcoming national elections. Opposition members from the Forum for Democratic Change party (FDC) issued a statement that said they believe the upcoming elections will not be fair. In other words, FDC senior members think the government intends to cheat in the 2011 national elections.&S232;

January 28, 2010: A bipartisan group in the US Congress asked the US administration to fulfill goals outlined in the Northern Uganda Recovery and Lords Resistance Army Disarmament Act of 2009. (Yes, that is the US legislation’s name. You can’t make this stuff up.) The US law is intended to help Uganda help reintegrate former LRA fighters into Ugandan society and help Uganda’s northern areas (the area where the LRA operated) recover from the long war.

January 27, 2010: Somali Islamists killed one Ugandan soldier serving with African Union peacekeeping forces in Somalia. Uganda now has around 3000 soldiers in Somalia.

January 21, 2009: The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights issued a statement that said LRA attacks in Sudan may be considered as “crimes against humanity” because of the “consistent brutality” displayed in the attacks. A recent study by the UN said that between December 2008 and March 2009 the LRA launched at least 27 attacks in southern Sudan. These attacks resulted in the deaths of 81 people, and 18 children were kidnapped. Many more people (no number given) were wounded or raped. Approximately 38,000 Sudanese fled LRA attacks. The study reported the LRA fighters typically operate in “groups of from five to 20.” This report tracks with Ugandan and Congolese reports that the LRA has “splintered” into small groups (following the December 2008 attack on LRA bases in Congo’s Garamba National Park). The groups are armed with AK-47s and various “bladed weapons” (eg, machete). Most of the attacks in Sudan were conducted with the bladed weapons. Survivors reported the LRA used firearms on people who tried to flee. Survivors also said the LRA thugs often mutilated the bodies of the dead. Kidnapping (abduction) in sub-Saharan African conflicts often becomes enslavement, with the kidnapped serving as porters (for ammo and food) or even sex slaves. This is another reason several international agencies advocate charging the LRA with war crimes. As it is, the International Criminal Court (ICC) has charged several senior LRA leaders with war crimes.

January 19, 2010: The Government of South Sudan (GOSS) promised to fight the LRA and drive its cadres out of southern Sudan. Sudan’s Western Equatoria state has suffered numerous LRA attacks. The GOSS has reinforced its military forces in Western Equatoria state.

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