5. High-Tech Genocide in Congo
Sources:
The Taylor Report, March 28, 2005
Title: The Worlds Most Neglected Emergency: Phil Taylor
talks to Keith Harmon Snow
Earth First! Journal, August 2005
Title: High-Tech Genocide
Author: Sprocket
Z Magazine, March 1, 2006
Title: Behind the Numbers: Untold Suffering in the Congo
Authors: Keith Harmon Snow and David Barouski
Faculty Evaluator: Thom Lough
Student Researchers: Deyango Harris and Daniel Turner
The worlds most neglected emergency, according to the UN Emergency
Relief Coordinator, is the ongoing tragedy of the Congo, where six to
seven million have died since 1996 as a consequence of invasions and
wars sponsored by western powers trying to gain control of the regions
mineral wealth. At stake is control of natural resources that are sought
by U.S. corporationsdiamonds, tin, copper, gold, and more significantly,
coltan and niobium, two minerals necessary for production of cell phones
and other high-tech electronics; and cobalt, an element essential to
nuclear, chemical, aerospace, and defense industries.
Columbo-tantalite, i.e. coltan, is found in three-billion-year-old
soils like those in the Rift Valley region of Africa. The tantalum extracted
from the coltan ore is used to make tantalum capacitors, tiny components
that are essential in managing the flow of current in electronic devices.
Eighty percent of the worlds coltan reserves are found in the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Niobium is another high-tech mineral
with a similar story.
Sprocket reports that the high-tech boom of the 1990s caused the price
of coltan to skyrocket to nearly $300 per pound. In 1996 U.S.-sponsored
Rwandan and Ugandan forces entered eastern DRC. By 1998 they seized
control and moved into strategic mining areas. The Rwandan Army was
soon making $20 million or more a month from coltan mining. Though the
price of coltan has fallen, Rwanda maintains its monopoly on coltan
and the coltan trade in DRC. Reports of rampant human rights abuses
pour out of this mining region.
Coltan makes its way out of the mines to trading posts where foreign
traders buy the mineral and ship it abroad, mostly through Rwanda. Firms
with the capability turn coltan into the coveted tantalum powder, and
then sell the magic powder to Nokia, Motorola, Compaq, Sony, and other
manufacturers for use in cell phones and other products.
Keith Harmon Snow emphasizes that any analysis of the geopolitics in
the Congo, and the reasons for why the Congolese people have suffered
a virtually unending war since 1996, requires an understanding of the
organized crime perpetrated through multinational businesses. The tragedy
of the Congo conflict has been instituted by invested corporations,
their proxy armies, and the supra-governmental bodies that support them.
The process is tied to major multinational corporations at all levels.
These include U.S.-based Cabot Corp. and OM Group; HC Starck of Germany;
and Nigncxia of Chinacorporations that have been linked by a United
Nations Panel of Experts to the atrocities in DRC. Extortion, rape,
massacres, and bribery are all part of the criminal networks set up
and maintained by huge multinational companies. Yet as mining in the
Congo by western companies proceeds at an unprecedented ratesome
$6 million in raw cobalt alone exiting DRC dailymultinational
mining companies rarely get mentioned in human rights reports.
Sprocket notes that Sam Bodman, CEO of Cabot during the coltan boom,
was appointed in December 2004 to serve as President Bushs Secretary
of Energy. Under Bodmans leadership from 1987 to 2000, Cabot was
one of the U.S.s largest polluters, accounting for 60,000 tons
of airborne toxic emissions annually. Snow adds that Sonys current
Executive Vice President and General Counsel Nicole Seligman was a former
legal adviser for Bill Clinton. Many who held positions of power in
the Clinton administration moved into high positions with Sony.
The article Behind the Numbers, coauthored by Snow and
David Barouski, details a web of U.S. corruption and conflicts of interest
between mining corporations such as Barrick Gold (see Story #21) and
the U.S. government under George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and George
W. Bush, as well as U.S. arms dealers such as Simax; U.S. defense companies
such as Lockheed Martin, Halliburton, Northrop Grumman, GE, Boeing,
Raytheon, and Bechtel; humanitarian organizations such as
CARE, funded by Lockheed Martin, and International Rescue Committee,
whose Board of Overseers includes Henry Kissinger; Conservation
interests that provide the vanguard for western penetration into Central
Africa; and of course, PR firms and news outlets such as the New York
Times.
Sprocket closes his article by noting that its not surprising
this information isnt included in the literature and manuals that
come with your cell phones, pagers, computers, or diamond jewelry. Perhaps,
he suggests, mobile phones should be outfitted with stickers that read:
Warning! This device was created with raw materials from central
Africa. These materials are rare, nonrenewable, were sold to fund a
bloody war of occupation, and have caused the virtual elimination of
endangered species. Have a nice day. People need to realize, he
says, that there is a direct link between the gadgets that make our
lives more convenient and sophisticatedand the reality of the
violence, turmoil, and destruction that plague our world.
UPDATE BY SPROCKET
There are large fortunes to be made in the manufacturing of high-tech
electronics and in selling convenience and entertainment to American
consumers, but at what cost?
Conflicts in Africa are often shrouded with misinformation, while U.S.
and other western interests are routinely downplayed or omitted by the
corporate media. The June 5, 2006, cover story of Time, entitled Congo:
The Hidden Toll of the Worlds Deadliest War, was no exception.
Although the article briefly mentioned coltan and its use in cell phones
and other electronic devices, no mention was made of the pivotal role
this and other raw materials found in the region play in the conflict.
The story painted the ongoing war as a pitiable and horrible tragedy,
avoiding the corporations and foreign governments that have created
the framework for the violence and those which have strong financial
and political interests in the conflicts outcome.
In an article written by Johann Hari and published by The Hamilton
Spectator on May 13, 2006, the corporate media took a step toward addressing
the true reason for the tremendous body count that continues to pile
up in the Democratic Republic of Congo: The only change over the
decades has been the resources snatched for Western consumption
rubber under the Belgians, diamonds under Mobutu, coltan and casterite
today.
Most disturbing is that in the corporate media, the effect of this
conflict on nonhuman life is totally overlooked. Even with a high-profile
endangered species like the Eastern lowland gorilla hanging in the balance,
almost driven to extinction through poaching and habitat loss by displaced
villagers and warring factions, the environmental angle of the story
is rarely considered.
The next step in understanding the exploitation and violence wrought
upon the inhabitants of central Africa, fueled by the hunger for high-tech
toys in the U.S., is to expose corporations like Sony and Motorola.
These corporations dont want protest movements tarnishing their
reputations. Nor do they want to call attention to all of the gorillas
coltan kills, and the guerrillas it feeds.
It is time for our culture to start seeing more value in living beings,
whether gorillas or humans, than in our disposable high-tech gadgets
such as cell phones. It is time to steal back a more compassionate existence
from the corporate plutocracy that creates destructive markets and from
the media system that has manufactured our consent.
It is not just a question of giving up cell phones (though that would
be a great start). We must question the appropriation of our planet
in the form of a resource to be consumed, rather than as a home and
community to be lived in.
High-Tech Genocide and other articles about cell phone
technology are available by contacting the author: sprocket@riseup.net.
UPDATE BY KEITH HARMON SNOW
War for the control of the Democratic Republic of Congowhat should
be the richest country in the worldbegan in Uganda in the 1980s,
when now Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni shot his way to power with
the backing of Buckingham Palace, the White House, and Tel Aviv behind
him.
Paul Kagame, now president of Rwanda, served as Musevenis Director
of Military Intelligence. Kagame later trained at Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas, before the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF)backed by Roger
Winter, the U.S. Committee on Refugees, and the others aboveinvaded
Rwanda. The RPF destabilized and then secured Rwanda. This coup detat
is today misunderstood as the Rwanda Genocide. What played
out in Rwanda in 1994 is now playing out in Darfur, Sudan; regime change
is the goal, genocide is the tool of propaganda used to
manipulate and disinform.
In 1996, Paul Kagame and Yoweri Museveni, with the Pentagon behind
them, launched their covert war against Zaires Mobutu Sese Seko
and his western backers. A decade later, there are 6 or 7 million dead,
at the very least, and the war in Congo (Zaire) continues.
If you are reading the mainstream newspapers or listening to National
Public Radio, you are contributing to your own mental illness, no matter
how astute you believe yourself to be at balancing or deciphering
the code.
News reports in Time Magazine (The Deadliest War In The World,
June 6, 2006) and on CNN (Rape, Brutality Ignored to Aid Congo
Peace, May 26, 2006) that appeared at the time of this writing
are being interpreted by conscious people to be truth-telling at last.
However, these are perfect examples filled with hidden deceptions and
manipulations.
For accuracy and truth on Central Africa, look to people like Robin
Philpot (Imperialism Dies Hard), Wayne Madsen (Genocide and Covert Operations
in Africa, 19931999), Amos Wilson (The Falsification of Consciousness),
Charles Onana (The Secrets of the Rwanda GenocideInvestigation
on the Mysteries of a President), Antoine Lokongo (www.congopanorama.info),
Phil Taylor (www.taylor-report.com), Christopher Black (Racism,
Murder and Lies in Rwanda). World War 4 Report has published my
reports, but they are inconsistent in their attention to accuracy, and
would as quickly adopt the propaganda, and have done so at times.
It is possible to collect little fragments of truth here and therenever
counting on the mainstream system for thisbut one must beware
the deceptions and bias. In this vein, the elite business journal Africa
Confidential is often very revealing. Some facts can be gleaned from
www.DigitalCongo.net and Africa Research Bulletin.
Professor David Gibbs book The Political Economy of Third World
Intervention: Case of the Congo Crises is an excellent backgrounder
that identifies players still active today (especially Maurice Tempelsman
and his diamonds interests connected to the Democratic Party). Ditto
King Leopolds Ghost by Adam Hocshchild, butexemplifying
the expedience of interestsremember that Hocshchild
never tells you, the reader, that his father ran a mining company in
Congo. Almost ALL reportage is expedient; one needs take care their
propensity to be deceived.
Professor Ruth Mayers book Artificial Africas: Colonial Images
in the Times of Globalization is a particularly poignant articulation
of the means by which the media system distorts and manipulates
all things African. And, never forget www.AllThingsPass.com.
Also hoping to correct the record and reveal the truth, the International
Forum for Truth and Justice in the Great Lakes of Africa (www.veritasrwandaforum.org),
based in Spain, and co-founded by Nobel Prize nominee Juan Carrero Seraleegui,
is involved in a groundbreaking lawsuit charging massive crimes against
humanity and acts of genocide were committed by the now government of
Rwanda.