Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

Forbes — Ghana: Shining Black Star

Friday, March 6th, 2009


****Ghanaian Flag — Photo Wikipedia

On March 6, Ghana celebrates the 52nd anniversary of its independence from British rule. For a country of over 100 linguistic and ethnic groups, half a century of political sovereignty and national unity is remarkable. Most impressive, however, is the country’s transformation over this time period. For as Ghana goes, so does much of Africa.

Ever the pioneer, Ghana was the first sub-Saharan African country to gain freedom from a colonial power in 1957 under Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah’s visionary leadership. Ghana thus emerged as the rising star of the independence movement. Nkrumah became a torchbearer of Pan-Africanism and the non-aligned countries, raising hope for millions of subjugated Africans–from Senegal to Congo to Kenya to South Africa.

"We face neither East nor West," Nkrumah once said. "We face forward." In essence, he captured Africans’ dream of self-determination. Within five years of Ghana’s independence, most sub-Saharan colonies would become independent countries. Nevertheless, the promise dissipated quickly when the military overthrew Nkrumah in 1966 and Ghana embarked on the muddy and bloody path of coups d’état and a long line of dictatorships.

Hoover Digest: Bush’s Quiet Successes

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete at the 2008 Sullivan Summit in Arusha ****Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele
Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete at the 2008 Sullivan Summit in Arusha
****Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele

We Africanists expect a great deal from the Democrats and are often disappointed. We expect nothing of the Republicans and are pleasantly surprised.”
Andrew Young, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations


At a time when there is constant talk of America’s bad image around the world, former President Bush can take comfort in his legacy in Africa. Approval ratings for the United States, according to the Pew Foundation’s poll data, exceed 80 percent in many African countries. Gallup polls in 139 countries found that the 62 percent approval rating of U.S. leadership in sub-Saharan Africa is 30 percent higher than in other parts of the world.

Foreign policy analysts and historians will debate the merits of Bush’s foreign policy for the next several years; they will decide how much damage his administration has inflicted on America’s standing abroad and how much time and money will be required to restore it. The Africans themselves, however, will have a different debate. They found an unlikely but invaluable partner in Bush, who did much to rebuild Africa’s faith in the United States.

NewsHour with Jim Lehrer: US Election Grabs Intense Interest Overseas

Friday, June 13th, 2008

****Photo PBS NewsHour with Jim Lehrer

The United States presidential electoral campaign generates as much excitement in Africa as it does in other parts of the world. I just returned from a trip to Ethiopia and Tanzania where the fascination is apparent everywhere. In a sense, Africans feel that they have a stake in this race. They see Barack Obama as one of their own who may get a chance to run the most powerful nation in the world.

Along with Nayan Chanda (YaleGlobal Online Magazine), Martin Klingst (Die Zeit Weekly Newspaper) and Hisham Melhem (Al Arabiya), I joined Judy Woodruff on PBS’s NewsHour with Jim Lehrer for a discussion on foreign perspectives on the campaign and the two candidates.

Here is part of the discussion:

RAY SUAREZ: Finally tonight, the foreign fascination with the U.S. presidential contest. Judy Woodruff has the story.

JUDY WOODRUFF: This year’s campaign is grabbing the attention of millions of people overseas. A poll released today by the Pew Research Center, surveying more than 24,000 people in 24 countries, found that many believe the next president may well change U.S. foreign policy for the better and that, just about everywhere, greater numbers express confidence in presidential candidate Barack Obama than in John McCain.

Mobutu’s Legacy and Congo Today: A Discussion with Bridget Conley-Zilkic of the US Holocaust Museum

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

***Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – Kinshasa La Belle

***Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – Kinshasa La Belle

A discussion on Mobutu’s legacy with Bridget Conley-Zilkic of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC.

BRIDGET CONLEY-ZILKIC: With me today is Mvemba Dizolele, who is a writer and journalist. Thank you and welcome to the show.

MVEMBA DIZOLELE: Thank you very much, Bridget, for having me.

BRIDGET CONLEY-ZILKIC: Can you take us back a little bit to the time you mentioned how young, for instance, Mobutu was at his first coup. At that moment, you have Congo coming out of its colonial period. What are the questions that the Congolese people are struggling with? What are the questions that will frame this new country?

MVEMBA DIZOLELE: The big questions of the day in 1960 or before 1960. One is freedom. People want freedom. Enough already, because the Belgians had been here since 1885. So people wanted independence. Remember, it’s after World War II, and some Congolese had fought in World War II. They’ve seen what else is out there. There’s this big movement called the Negritude. A lot of African writers living in Europe, especially in France writing about the black consciousness.

Pascal Kambale: Ce Que le Kenya Aurait Dû Apprendre du Congo

Monday, January 21st, 2008

***Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – Pro-Bemba Rally, Mbandaka, Equateur

Par Pascal Kambale  

Eldoret, c’est la petite ville du Rift Valley kenyan que le président Daniel Arap Moi choisit pour réunir le 3 juin 2000 ses homologues rwandais Paul Kagame et congolais Laurent-Désiré Kabila autour d’un sommet sur « la situation politique et sécuritaire dans leurs pays respectifs et dans la région des Grands Lacs. » Un communiqué pauvrement écrit et long de quatre petits paragraphes avait des difficultés à cacher le fait que le sommet, convoqué quelques mois seulement après les accords de Lusaka, ne visait aucune initiative diplomatique importante. En fait, nombreux au Kenya ont soupçonné qu’en réalité le président Moi voulait ce sommet pour des besoins de marketing politique personnel.

UN Sepecial Investigation into Kinshasa Events of March 2007: Preliminary Findings

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – Congolese Flagi

Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – Congolese Flag

In the spirit of transparency, which is needed in moving Congo to the next step in its long march to stability and security, a copy of the preliminary findings from MONUC’s special investigation into the Kinshasa events of March 2007, which led Jean-Pierre Bemba into exile, is attached below.

For the past few years, MONUC has played a criticical role in keeping a semblance of order in DRC. This is particularly true for eastern Congo, where only God knows what would have happened had it not been for a strong United Nations military presence.

Despite the many problems that plague peacekeeping operations in DRC — sexual abuses, gun smuggling, mineral trafficking – the blue helmets have done more than just deter the escalation of conflict. The UN has helped run and manage Congo through these tumultuous years.

Have You Been to Panzi?

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

***Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – Panzi Hospital, Bukavu, Sud Kivu

***Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – Panzi Hospital, Bukavu, Sud Kivu

If you have been to Bukavu, then you have probably heard of Panzi. If you have never been to Bukavu, all the same – you should know about Panzi. Located around 30 to 45 minutes from downtown Bukavu, this suburban is infamous around the world for one reason – the Panzi Hospital.

I heard of Panzi Hospital for the first time in 2004 while I served as a guide and interpreter to a civil society leader from Bukavu visiting in Washington, DC. Her stories were gruesome. She spoke of rape as a weapon of war. Rapes and more rapes. She brought the war to Washington, to the United States Congress, USAID, to the State Department.

Everywhere she went she spoke of the hundreds and thousands of women who have been raped – at gunpoint. Raped by militiamen. Raped by elements of the FARDC, the Congolese army. She cited statistics, the kind that makes one cry. She talked about Panzi Hospital — the place where some of these rape victims, the lucky ones, go for treatment.

Panzi Hospital Perspectives

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

***Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – Perspectives -- Panzi Hospital, Bukavu, Sud Kivu

***Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – Panzi Hospital, Bukavu, Sud Kivu

Speaking of Justice

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007

***Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele -- La Prison Centrale, Mbandaka, Equateur

***Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele – La Prison Centrale, Mbandaka, Equateur

How do you keep bad guys behind these walls — when you cannot even secure the main entrance?

 

Pascal Kambale — Assassinat de Serge Maheshe : à la douleur, la justice ne doit pas ajouter l’insulte d’un procès bâclé

Friday, August 31st, 2007

****Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele -- Boys at Kadutu Markets in Bukavu, South Kivu

****Photo Mvemba Phezo Dizolele — Boys at Kadutu Market in Bukavu, South Kivu

Assassinat de Serge Maheshe : à la douleur, la justice ne doit pas ajouter l’insulte d’un procès bâclé

Par  Pascal Kambale

Le Potentiel – Kinshasa

Edition 4114 du Samedi 01 Septembre 2007

Après le ridicule procès de l’assassinat de l’activiste des droits de l’homme Pascal Kabungulu en 2005, Bukavu vient de servir de cadre à un autre procès qui ne fera pas gagner aux magistrats une place enviable dans l’estime des Congolais.

Dans l’affaire de l’assassinat de Serge Maheshe, journaliste de la Radio Okapi, le tribunal militaire de garnison de Bukavu a condamné à mort le 28 août dernier, quatre personnes, Fredy Bisimwa et Mugisho Mastakila, d’une part, Alain Mulimbi et Serge Muhima, d’autre part. Deux couples que tout sépare et qu’absolument rien ne destinait à un sort commun. Alors que Serge Muhima et Alain Mulimbi, deux jeunes gens pourvus d’une solide éducation, étaient les meilleurs amis de Serge Maheshe, personne dans l’entourage de ce dernier ne connaissait Fredy Bisimwa et Mugisho Mastakila, « deux individus visiblement anormaux parce qu’intoxiqués ou drogués » d’après des parents de Serge et Alain. Les deux couples représentaient chacun l’une des deux pistes d’enquête possibles et les magistrats ont choisi la piste la plus invraisemblable, la plus ridicule et la moins crédible.