Category Archives: Lucia

WORLD FOOD CRICIS- Kenyans Wake UP!!

http://blog.jaluo.com/?p=655
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Date: Sun, 4 May 2008 22:30:15 -0700 (PDT)
From: amenya gibson
Subject: Ref Kenya

– – – – – – – – – – –

The current food crisis is a global phenomenon. There are places where people have gone on strike – Haiti, Philippines and so forth.

Even in US there are retail outlets that have started rations – stock quot, like maximum packets of rice for every shopper. 

Some countries in the middle east are negotiating with retail outlets not only because of shortage but also inflation. Some have rice stocks for 6 weeks!!

Back here, we have our own set of problems that compound this shortage. IDPs, bloated government, inadequate attention to agricultural production. Of course the violence led to a lot produce going to waste.

In addition to prayers as Amenya says, lets use the little we have. Lets start with our homes. Lets not waste food by all means. From purchasing, preparation to the way we preserve the leftovers (if there is any). 

We shall overcome someday. 

In the meantime, can we throw a challenge to people in the ministry of agriculture to return Kenya back in the map as a food surplus nation.

Cheers

– – –
Date:  Mon, 5 May 2008 11:34:00 -0700 (PDT)
From:  isaac thiga
Subject:  Re: Ref Kenya

– – – – – – – – – – –

The Kenyans must remember the word of the first president “RUDI MASHAMBANI”. Multinational corporations are going to starve the world’s peoples to death because of their control of world natural resources and sources of food!

http://banglapraxis.wordpress.com/2008/05/

http://www.fareedzakaria.com/ARTICLES/newsweek/061206.html

– – –
Date:  Tue, 6 May 2008 17:28:58 -0400
From:  Lucia Akech
Subject:  WORLD FOOD CRICIS- Kenyans Wake UP!!

President Habyarimana Stalled Power-sharing Government – Precusor to Rwanda Genocide

Rwanda Genocide Timeline

1918:

Under the Treaty of Versailles the former German colony of Rwanda-Urundi is made a U.N. protectorate to be governed by Belgium. The two territories (later to become Rwanda and Burundi) are administered separately under two different Tutsi monarchs.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

Both Germany and Belgium turned the traditional Hutu-Tutsi relationship into a class system. The minority Tutsi (14%) are favored over the Hutus (85%) and given privileges and western-style education. The Belgians used the Tutsi minority to enforce their rule.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1926:

Belgians introduce a system of ethnic identity cards differentiating Hutus from Tutsis. [1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

Post-1945:

After World War II, the king and the rest of the Tutsi elite demand independence. The call is resisted by Belgium and the White Fathers, who instead back Hutus who demand Hutu liberation from Tutsi oppression.
[5]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

1957:

PARMEHUTU (Party for the Emancipation of the Hutus) is formed while Rwanda is still under Belgian rule.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1959:

The main Hutu political party is the Mouvement Democratique Republicain (MDR) led by Gregoire Kayibanda, who, in the name of “social revolution” orchestrates the first of many pogroms against Tutsis, with Belgian connivance. Thousands are killed, and many more flee as refugees.
[5]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

1960:

Hutus win municipal elections organized by Belgian colonial rulers.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1961-62:

Belgians withdraw. Rwanda and Burundi become two separate and independent countries. [1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

A Hutu revolution in Rwanda installs a new president, Gregoire Kayibanda; fighting continues and thousands of Tutsis are forced to flee. In Burundi, Tutsis retain power.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1963:

Further massacre of Tutsis, this time in response to military attack by exiled Tutsis in Burundi. Again more refugees leave the country. It is estimated that by the mid-1960s half of the Tutsi population is living outside Rwanda.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1967:

Renewed massacres of Tutsis.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1973:

Purge of Tutsis from universities. Fresh outbreak of killings, again directed at Tutsi community.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

The army chief of staff, General Juvenal Habyarimana, seizes power, pledging to restore order. He sets up a one-party state. A policy of ethnic quotas is entrenched in all public service employment. Tutsis are restricted to nine percent of available jobs.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1975:

Habyarimana’s political party, the National Revolutionary Movement for Development (Mouvement Revolutionnaire National pour le Developpement, or MRND) is formed. Hutus from the president’s home area of northern Rwanda are given overwhelming preference in public service and military jobs. This pattern of exclusion of the Tutsis continues throughout the ’70s and ’80s.
[1] <http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

All Rwandans, regardless of age, are automatically made members of the MRND. Real power however lies not with formal party structures but with Habyarimana and his presidential guard, together with a small coterie of people close to him called the akazu (little house).
[5]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

Habyarimana retains ties with Belgium but cultivates closer links with France, which was happy to welcome another francophone state into “the family”. [5]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

Habyarimana’s Hutu regime becomes a formal military ally of France.
[6]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#6>

1980’s:

Under the presidency of François Mitteran, France becomes Rwanda’s biggest bilateral donor, and the two countries sign a military co-operation agreement which guarantees Habyarimana the assistance of French troops should his power become threatened.
[5]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

1986:

In Uganda, Rwandan exiles are among the victorious troops of Yoweri Museveni’s National Resistance Army who take power, overthrowing the dictator Milton Obote. The exiles then form the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), a Tutsi-dominated organization.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1989:

Coffee prices collapse, causing severe economic hardship in Rwanda.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1990:

July – Under pressure from Western aid donors, Habyarimana concedes the principle of multi-party democracy.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

October – RPF guerillas invade Rwanda from Uganda. After fierce fighting in which French and Zairean troops are called in to assist the government, a cease-fire is signed on March 29, 1991.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>
[5] <http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

The result is a stalemate, with the RPF holding Rwanda’s northern Byumba province and the government unable to capture it, but the RPF equally unable to advance on Kigali.
[5]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

1990-91:

The Rwandan army begins to train and arm civilian militias known as interahamwe (“Those who stand together”) For the next three years Habyarimana stalls on the establishment of a genuine multi-party system with power-sharing. Throughout this period thousands of Tutsis are killed in separate massacres around the country. Opposition politicians and newspapers
are persecuted.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1991:

Under French pressure, Habyarimana instituted long-delayed political reforms, including an end to the one party state.
[5]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

1992:

A multiparty government is formed and immediately begins negotiations with the RPF, despite hostility to the process from within the akazu.
[5]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

November – Prominent Hutu activist Dr. Leon Mugusera appeals to Hutus to send the Tutsis “back to Ethiopia” via the rivers.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1993:

February – RPF launches a fresh offensive and the guerillas reach the outskirts of Kigali. French forces are again called in to help the government side. Fighting continues for several months.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

August – Following months of negotiations, Habyarimana and the RPF sign a peace accord that allows for the return of refugees and a coalition Hutu-RPF government. 2,500 U.N. troops are deployed in Kigali to oversee the implementation of the accord.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

Representatives of all the non-French Western diplomatic missions in Kigali say that France sought a clear victory for President Habyarimana and the Little House. [6]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#6>

November – French troops leave.
[5]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#5>

September 1993 to March 1994 – President Habyarimana stalls on setting up of power-sharing government. Training of militias intensifies. Extremist radio station, Radio Mille Collines, begins broadcasting exhortations to attack the Tutsis. Human rights groups warn the international community of impending calamity.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

Throughout this period Belgian intelligence and the UNAMIR report of the activities preparing for violence. General Dallaire repeatedly requests that the UN allow him to seize illegal arms, but his requests are refused. Propoganda encouraging violence against the Tutsi is open; many killings and attacks occur; informants give information on killings which subsequently
occur; the UNAMIR blocks arms shipments, including from the Mil-Tec Corporation of the United Kingdom and the Society Dyl-Invest of France. Despite all this the UN does not act. Boutros-Ghali refuses to push the Security Council to strengthen the mandate believing it is futile to propose a change that the U.S. and U.K. are sure to oppose.
[2]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#2>

As the foreign governments most involved with Rwanda, France, the U.S., and Belgium follow the deteriorating situation and cooperate with the U.N. and with each other in trying to speed implementation of the Arusha Accords. Despite the clear signs of imminent violence, both France and the U.S. fail to respond with any new initiatives and continue to operate within the same constraints that have shaped their policy towards Rwanda for some time.
Belgium, spurred by the added responsibility of having troops on the ground, seeks a greater international commitment to prevent the disaster, but fails to invest the energy needed to make the other powers respond.
[2]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#2>

1994:

March – Many Rwandan human rights activists evacuate their families from Kigali believing massacres are imminent.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

6th April – President Habyarimana and the president of Burundi, Cyprien Ntaryamira, are killed when Habyarimana’s plane is shot down near Kigali Airport. Extremists, suspecting that the president is finally about to implement the Arusha Peace Accords, are believed to be behind the attack. That night the killing begins.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

7th April – The Rwandan Armed Forces (FAR) and the interahamwe set up roadblocks and go from house to house killing Tutsis and moderate Hutu politicians. Thousands die on the first day. U.N. forces stand by while the slaughter goes on. They are forbidden to intervene, as this would breach their “monitoring” mandate.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

8th April – The RPF launches a major offensive to end the genocide and rescue 600 of its troops surrounded in Kigali. The troops had been based in the city as part of the Arusha Accords.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

12th April – France closes its embassy in Kigali and its military assistance mission.
[6]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#6>

21st April – The U.N. cuts its forces from 2,500 to 250 following the murder of ten Belgian soldiers assigned to guard the moderate Hutu prime minister, Agathe Uwiliyingimana. The prime minister is killed and the Belgians are disarmed, tortured, and shot and hacked to death. They had been told not to resist violently by the U.N. force commander, as this would have
breached their mandate.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

30th April – The U.N. Security Council spends eight hours discussing the Rwandan crisis. The resolution condemning the killing omits the word “genocide.” Had the term been used, the U.N. would have been legally obliged to act to “prevent and punish” the perpetrators.
Meanwhile, tens of thousands of refugees flee into Tanzania, Burundi and Zaire. In one day
250,000 Rwandans, mainly Hutus fleeing the advance of the RPF, cross the border into Tanzania.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

Britain effectively aids the slaughter by helping to reduce UN force that could have prevented the killings, in helping to delay other plans for intervention and in resisting use of the term ‘genocide’ which would have obligated the international community to act.
[3]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#3>

17th May – As the slaughter of the Tutsis continues the U.N. agrees to send 6,800 troops and policemen to Rwanda with powers to defend civilians. A Security Council resolution says “acts of genocide may have been committed.” Deployment of the mainly African U.N. forces is delayed because of arguments over who will pay the bill and provide the equipment. The United States argues with the U.N. over the cost of providing heavy armoured vehicles for
the peacekeeping forces.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

22nd June – With still no sign of U.N. deployment, the Security Council authorizes the deployment of French forces in south-west Rwanda. They create a “safe area” in territory controlled by the government. Killings of Tutsis continue in the safe area, although some are protected by the French. The United States government eventually uses the word “genocide.”
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

July – The RPF captures Kigali. The Hutu government flees to Zaire, followed by a tide of refugees. The French end their mission and are replaced by Ethiopian U.N. troops. The RPF sets up an interim government of national unity in Kigali. A cholera epidemic sweeps the refugee camps in Zaire, killing thousands. Different U.N. agencies clash over reports that
RPF troops have carried out a series of reprisal killings in Rwanda. Several hundred civilians are said to have been executed. Meanwhile the killing of Tutsis continues in refugee camps.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

August – New Rwandan government agrees to trials before an international tribunal established by the U.N. Security Council.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

November – U.N. Security Council establishes an international tribunal that will oversee prosecution of suspects involved in genocide.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1995:

5th-10th January – U.N. begins process towards finalizing plans with Zaire and Tanzania that will lead to the return of one and a half million Hutus to Rwanda over the next five months. U.N. Security Council refuses to dispatch an international force to police refugee camps.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

19th February – Western governments, including the U.S. ($60 million), pledge $600 million in aid to Rwanda.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

27th February – U.N. Security Council urges all states to arrest people suspected of involvement in the Rwandan genocide.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

Mid May – Tensions increase between the United Nations and the Rwandan government; the government growing resentful of the lack of international financial aid. [1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

10th June – U.N. Security Council unanimously agrees to cut by more than half the number of U.N. troops in Rwanda after a direct request from the Rwandan government to withdraw U.N. forces.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

July – More than 720,000 Hutu refugees around Goma refuse to return to Rwanda. [1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

August – U.N. Security Council lifts arms embargo until September 1, 1996.
[1] <http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

20th September – At a Mass in Nairobi, Pope John Paul II urges an end to the bloodshed in Rwanda and Burundi.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

12th December – United Nations Tribunal for Rwanda announces first indictments against eight suspects; charges them with genocide and crimes against humanity.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

13th December – U.N. Security Council extends its peacekeeping mission for three more months and agrees to reduce the number of troops.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1996:

Rwandan troops invade and attack Hutu militia-dominated camps in Zaire in order to drive home the refugees.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

November – Mass repatriation from Zaire begins; the Rwandan government orders a moratorium on arrests of suspected genocide perpetrators.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

December – Trials begin for Hutus involved in 1994 genocide.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

Mid December – Tanzania closes refugee camps and repatriates Rwandans, bringing the total to over one million.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

1997:

10th January – First case in the Rwandan genocide trials comes before the International Criminal Tribunal in Arusha, Tanzania. The case is against Jean Paul Akayesu, a local government official accused of ordering mass killings in his area.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

17th January – In a Rwanda court, Francois Bizimutima becomes the third Hutu convicted and sentenced to death for his role in genocide.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

A woman who testified against Jean Paul Akayesu is murdered along with her husband and seven children by Hutu extremists.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

22nd January – Over 300 are killed in an attempt by the Rwandan army to capture Hutu insurgents responsible for killings in Northwestern Rwanda, including the murder of the three Spanish aid workers. U.N. officials state many victims are recently returned refugees who witnessed the 1994 genocide and are potential trial witnesses.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

2nd February – In Gikongoro, Rwanda, Venuste Niyonzima is the first man tried locally for crimes against humanity in his own village. A U.N. Human Rights official in Rwanda expresses “serious concern” over the lack of lawyers and adequate defense for those accused of participation in the 1994 genocide. Canadian priest, Guy Pinard, a witness to the 1994 genocide, is murdered by Hutu terrorists while saying mass.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

4th February – Five human rights observers are killed in an ambush in Cyangugu, Rwanda. The murders are viewed as an effort by Hutu terrorists to get foreign observers out of the country. All human rights observers in Cyangugu, Kibuye, and Gisenyi are withdrawn by the U.N. to Kigali.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

12th February – United Nations watchdog agency criticizes the management of the Rwandan genocide trials.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

14th February – United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan asks the five permanent security council members to look into reports that the Zairean army is providing arms to Rwandan Hutus in an Eastern Zaire refugee camp.
[1] <http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

Vincent Nkezazaganwa, a Rwandan Supreme Court Justice, is gunned down by uniformed gunmen at his house. Frodouald Karamina, leader of a Hutu extremist political movement, is sentenced to death for his involvement in the genocide. Karamina is believed to be one of the leaders and organizers of the genocide, having coined the slogan “Hutu Power” and made many racist radio broadcasts urging mass murder. Karamina expressed no remorse for the
part he had played in the genocide. Karamina was born a Tutsi and assimilated himself as a Hutu only later in life.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

*19th-20th February – *Four prominent Rwandans accused of genocide appear in court for the first time.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

*23rd February – *Israel Nemeyimana is the first defendant in the genocide trials to be found not guilty. Authorities state there was a lack of evidence and witnesses.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

*26th February – *Citing mismanagement and inefficiency, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan fires the chief administrator Andronico Adede, and deputy prosecutor Honore Rakoromoanana in the Rwanda criminal trials. Agwu Okali of Nigeria is appointed new chief minister. By this date, the court has indicted 21 suspects.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

28th February – Virginia Mukankusi is sentenced to death for her participation in the genocide.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

Rwandan- and Ugandan-backed rebels depose President Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire; Laurent Kabila becomes president of Zaire, which is renamed the Democratic Republic of Congo.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

1998:

Rwanda switches allegiance to support rebel forces trying to depose Kabila in the wake of the Congolese president’s failure to expel extremist Hutu
militias. [4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

1999:

December – A leader of a Hutu militia that helped lead the genocide, businessman Georges Rutaganda, is found guilty of genocide, crimes against humanity, and sentenced to life in prison. He is the sixth person found guilty since the tribunal began hearings in Arusha, Tanzania.
[1]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#1>

2000:

March – Rwandan President Pasteur Bizimungu, a Hutu, resigns over differences regarding the composition of a new cabinet and after accusing parliament of targeting Hutu politicians in anti-corruption investigations.
[4] <http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

April – Ministers and members of parliament elect Vice-President Paul Kagame as Rwanda’s new president.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

2001:

October – Voting to elect members of traditional “gacaca” courts begins. The courts – in which ordinary Rwandans judge their peers – aim to clear the backlog of 1994 genocide cases.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

December – A new flag and national anthem are unveiled to try to promote national unity and reconciliation.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

2002:

April – Former president Pasteur Bizimungu is arrested and faces trial on charges of illegal political activity and threats to state security.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

July – Rwanda, DR Congo sign peace deal under which Rwanda will pull troops out of DR Congo and DR Congo will help disarm Rwandan Hutu gunmen blamed for killing Tutsi minority in 1994 genocide.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

October – Rwanda says it has pulled the last of its troops out of DR Congo, four years after they went in to support Congolese rebels against the Kabila government.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

2003:

May – Voters back a draft constitution designed to prevent another genocide. The document bans the incitement of ethnic hatred.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

August – Paul Kagame claims a landslide victory in the first presidential elections since the 1994 genocide.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

October – First multi-party parliamentary elections; President Kagame’s Rwandan Patriotic Front wins absolute majority. EU observers say poll was marred by irregularities and fraud.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

December – Three former media directors found guilty of inciting Hutus to kill Tutsis during 1994 genocide and receive lengthy jail sentences.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

2004:

March – President Kagame rejects conclusion of French report which says he ordered 1994 attack on president’s plane, which sparked genocide.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

June – Former president, Pasteur Bizimungu, is sentenced to 15 years in jail for embezzlement, inciting violence and associating with criminals.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

October – Nearly 400 Rwandan troops deploy as part of a peacekeeping mission in Sudan’s Darfur region.
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

2005:

March – Main Hutu rebel group, FDLR, says it is ending its armed struggle. FDLR is one of several groups accused of creating instability in DR Congo; many of its members are accused of taking part in 1994 genocide
[4]<http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/biblios/biblio_rwanda.html#4>

Sent by Lucia.

Belgrade’s US Embassy set on fire

Kombe kombe wuog uru rabala tieko dhou. Ji ool gi jo imbo ma keto umgi e weche ji. Ji ool gi dhier majogi keto kuomji gi thuon kamoro amora magidhiyoe. Ang’enge gi miriambo nitie kamoro amora majogi nitie. Ji ool gi ang’enge.

Lucia 

Belgrade’s US Embassy set on fire
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080221/ap_on_re_eu/serbia_kosovo_independence

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See also  http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/feb/21/kosovo.serbia1

EXCERPT: 

The Serbian prime minister, Vojislav Kostunica, told the crowd that “Kosovo belongs to the Serbian people.”

“As long as we live, Kosovo is Serbia,” he said from a stage in front of the former parliament building. A huge banner with the same message was draped across the front of the old parliament.

Sent by Lucia

POWER SHARING IN KENYA; WHICH POWER? WHO BENEFITS? THIS SMELLS LIKE FISH!!!

Mon, 11 Feb 2008 18:27:08  

MILOME, MILOME, MILOME

********************************************

The dictatorial decision  by  Mwai Kibaki and his cronies to disregard
voters verdict on 12/27/07 was an overt message to all Kenyans that  Mwai
Kibaki and elites behind  him “are acting like the supreme rulers of
Kenyans”. The use of armed  forces  and Mungiki emphasized that they are
 prepared to crush the citizens “if theyraise your voices  or mount any
protest against our decision”.

It is , therefore, difficult to comprehend how a group with that kind of
mindset can honestly sit down  with ODM and agree to relinquish one iota of
the supreme power they grabbed by rigging the elections. These people have
no respect for  average Kenyans who see no light at the end of the dark
tunnel.

This bogus power sharing negation supported by Washington and London and the
investors they support has been institutes to give them time to tighten the
rules of engagement. ODM is currently being  so defanged that at the end of
this coup, they will be unable to amount any formidable opposition. That
is, if the Pentagon members  are still united by the end of defanging
period.

Let us go back and remember the enthusiastic multitudes of people who
attended those  campaign rallies. 100% of these people voted for a change.
A lot  amount of money, money large enough to build decent housing for those
people living in Kibera and Mathare, was wasted during these campaigns.
There were helicopters hired by PNU to drop money from by the money bag man
Stanley Livondo. Remember Steadman polls which started by giving
favourable polls statistics ODM  eventually started to favour Kibaki during
the closing days of the elections.This was followed by a stern warning by
Njenga Karume  in  NATION NEWSPAPER , Publication Date: 12/3/2007 (see the
link below)

 http://www.jaluo.com/wangwach/200712/Lucy_Kimani120307b.html

Similar warning was issued  earlier by the US Ambassador to Kenya Mr.
Michael Ranneberger, the Nation which recognized Kibaki  immediately after
 the rigging was complete. Read this chilling interview
http://www.jaluo.com/wangwach/200712/Joe_Ombuor121807.html

QUOTE
American Ambassador to Kenya, Mr Michael Ranneberger, is upbeat that this
year’s hotly contested General Election will be free, fair and transparent.

In an exclusive interview with The Standard, he singled out violence in some
parts of the country and the brutality meted out on a number of women
candidates as a blot on the pre-election period, but he paid tribute to the
three leading Presidential candidates for strongly and clearly stating their
disapproval of it and the Commissioner of Police for promising to bolster
security for women candidates.

He urged the media, particularly the public-funded State broadcaster, KBC,
to be objective in their campaign coverage.

Speaking at his official residence in Nairobi this week, the envoy made
clear his abhorrence of the misuse of State resources for campaign purposes.

On the thorny issue of corruption, Ranneberger said he thought Kenya was on
course in fighting the vice, even though cases such as Goldenberg and Anglo
Leasing had yet to be resolved.

He condemned tribal politics as a dark factor in Kenya and appealed to
leaders to reach out beyond tribal issues.

“It is important not to let tribalism dominate these elections,” he
emphasised.

The 10th General Election, said Ranneberger, was a defining moment for
Kenya. He cited the reappointment of Mr Samuel Kivuitu as Chairman of the
Electoral Commission of Kenya as a positive step ‘because most Kenyans —
including political parties — have confidence in him and his determination
to run a free and fair election’.

*The envoy said he was confident that all the competing sides would respect
the results, once they were declared by the Electoral Commission.
*
*Ranneberger said he anticipated a smooth transition ‘regardless of the
outcome on December 27’ and called on the principal Presidential candidates
to ensure their teams were in touch for an incident-free post-election
period.
*
*”Let whichever side that wins reach out to the others,” he advised, saying
each side ought to be sending out reassuring messages that they intend to be
all-inclusive and to treat losers fairly.
*
*The Ambassador said the US had great interest in the election, citing the
high-level delegation sent as observers and election monitors from the US
Embassy.
*
UNQUOTE

This warning became effective immediately the rigging was accomplished.

The power brokers behind this power sharing myth have not defined” what
power “is being shared here because
(1) Kenya has impassible roads which have become death traps to thousands of
its citizens

(2) Kenya has  decaying infrastructures which have not been repaired since
1963. Some of the infrastructures are now owned by foreigners.

(3) The  only accomplishments these  Kenya’s leaders, who are being shoved
down  Kenyans throats, have been  limited to corruption and  building
 massive filthy slums and kiosks which are oozing with no running water  and
open sewage  found in every corner of the republic

(4) Millions of Kenyans are dying from treatable diseases because of  lack
of medicine and treatment facilities.

(5)  Thousands of Kenya’s youths are unemployed. These young people
participated, whole hEARTEDLY, in the 12/27/2007 election process and some
of them have paid the ultimate prize (death).

(6) Despite the claims economic growth,  massive foreign aids has been
pouring into Kenya. How/Where is this money being used?

*Warning*: If PNU and ODM members on the one hand and International
community on the other hand are engaged in a discussion to dish out out
goodies for their personal aggrandisement at the expense of  voters, they
will be making a fatal mistake.  YOUNG Kenyans MUST WATCH WHAT THESE THREE
PARTIES ARE DOING AND NOT ALLOW THEMSELVES TO BE TAKEN FOR FOOLS.
ALREADY, THE ARE INDICATIONS SOMETHING BAD I S  ABOUT TO HAPPEN. THESE KENYAN AFRICANS ARE BEING TREATED LIKE CHILDREN BY THE SO CALLED INTERNATIONAL BULLIES WHO HAVE INTERESTS NOT RELATED TO WHAT IS AILING KENYANS. WHY WOULD THERE BE NEWS BLACK OUT? WHY WOULD ODINGA NOT BE ALLOWED TO CONSULT WITH HIS TEAM MATES. THERE IS A SERIOUS ATTEMPT TO ISOLATE THE LUOS. SOMETHING MIGHT BE COOKING AROUND LAKE VICTORIA——–OIL DISCOVERIES OR SOMETHING!!!   THE LUOS ARE GOING TO BE TREATED LIKE PEOPLE IN DAFUR
REGION OF SUDAN.
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http://www.eastandard.net/news/?id=1143981781&cid=4

quote
He spoke as the international community continued piling pressure on both
sides to agree on a quick settlement.

*On Monday, five foreign diplomats warned that any party sabotaging the
ongoing talks would earn the wrath of the international community*.

“*Kenya is a vital country in this region and the international community is
not ready to watch it slump into anarchy,” said Norwegian Ambassador Ms
Hellen Jacobsen*.

Jacobsen and four other diplomats — Rolland Hausan (Austria), Tony Musimanga
(South Africa), Elizabeth Barbier (France) and Haeticia Van Denassum (the
Netherlands) — were visiting the displaced at the Eldoret ASK Showground.

unquote
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THEY ARE PILING GABBAGE ON THESE PEOPLE AND TREATING THEM LIKE CHILDREN.  KOFI ANNAN WILL BE GIVEN AWARD FOR BEING A GOOD NEGRO.

Have these INTERNATIONAL BULLIES  visited Kisumu, Kericho and Naivasha where
Mungiki roasted LUOS????

– Lucia