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Elmo B, great diary. I do hope that we can provide one exception over here of the "noone seems to care" part of kcurie's point.

Let me just add two related news items:

"More than half of the presidential candidates in Democratic Republic of Congo's landmark elections, due this month, have called for a postponement.

Twenty of the 33 candidates say the elections are being badly organised and question why an extra 5m ballot papers have been printed..."

and most importantly, an interview with Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja, Director of UNDP Oslo Governance Centre, in which the African political scientist does not mince words:

...What is evident is that France and its allies, African as well as non-African, do not wish to see the DRC become a regional power in Central Africa, and thus constitute a threat to French hegemony and Western interests in the sub-region. A strong state in the Congo will not only threaten French control over the resource-rich countries in the sub-region, namely, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Chad, Congo-Brazzaville, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Sao Tome and Principe. Moreover, the DRC has enough arable soil, rainfall, lakes and rivers to become the breadbasket of Africa, and enough hydroelectric power to light up the whole continent from the Cape to Cairo. While its mineral resources are so abundant that a young Belgian geologist declared the country a geological scandal at the beginning of the last century, the real scandal of the Congo include the facts that its uranium was used to build the first atomic bombs in the world and its wealth has since the days of King Leopold II been used not in the interests of its people but to the benefit of its rulers and their external allies.

The forthcoming election means more to the international community, which is spending heavily on it and even sending in European Union forces to supplement MONUC to ensure that it is being held, than to the Congolese people. The major powers of the world and the international organizations under their control would like to legitimize their current client regime in Kinshasa so they can continue unfettered to extract all the resources they need from the Congo...

...Since the current transitional government has not fulfilled the requirements laid out in the Sun City/Pretoria accord for free and fair elections, the ritual of 30 July is likely to confirm Joseph Kabila as President, but it will not change the political situation of the country for the better. Violence will continue in the northeast, and corruption and incompetence will remain the most salient features of a government with an externally-driven agenda...


The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom - William Blake
by talos (mihalis at gmail dot com) on Sat Jul 8th, 2006 at 07:35:19 PM EST
I meant of course, Elco B. Sorry...

The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom - William Blake
by talos (mihalis at gmail dot com) on Sat Jul 8th, 2006 at 08:02:35 PM EST
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Yes, here in Belgium we expect major troubles during and immediatly after the elections in DR Congo. An indication for that was the fact the Belgian part of the European Battlke group had major exercises before leaving for Benin and Gabon, where yhey stay on call'in case off..'.
ALL those exercises, crossing a large river with speed boots, storm-landings with C-130 Hercules planes.... were organised to execute evacuations. I couldn't find anything about what is done to help organize the elections.

The struggle of man against tyranny is the struggle of memory against forgetting.(Kundera)
by Elco B (elcob at scarlet dot be) on Sun Jul 9th, 2006 at 01:35:08 PM EST
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