voteforhumanity

Sign Petitions

End Congo and
Uganda Genocide!

Sign the Great Lakes Peace Petition to Barack Obama, Ban Ki Moon and Joe Biden

petition-graphic

In recent weeks, Uganda’s army with other countries in the region, attacked the Lord’s Resistance Army, sparking a trail of preventable massacres. Innocent Congolese civilians and captive women and children with the LRA–who were not protected in the first place–must not be a casualty in the search for Joseph Kony.

The United States, Britain and the United Nations have supported this disastrous resumption of war by the Ugandan government, which has been harshly criticized by US Senator Russ Feingold as not having done enough to protect civilians and abductees.

Act for the innocent. Sign the petition and voice your thoughts for justice!

[Please note that a valid email address must be used; but you can sign anonymously.]

UN Security Council Protest

Sign the petition and voice your concern.

  1. Giving uganda a seat on UN security council is inconsequenstial. Uganda is not different from other UN seat holders. UN has been there and done nothing to stope genocide in Rwanda, and now Darfur. Ig Uganda is guilty of Genocide why has not UN taken action? And if UN must take action against UgNAD IT SHOULD BEGIN WITH ALL WHO SUPPORTED AND IGNORED GENOCIDE IN RWANDA UN SECURITY COUNCIL INCLUDED.

    To hold a seat or not to hold is useless as far as human rights protection is concerned. The genocide in Rwanda which happened in the presence of all powers is a sad reminder of the uselessness of UN.

    David

  2. Uganda plans looting charges

    Residents of Bunia are being left destitute by the fighting over land and resources
    Human misery is the result of the plundering of the DRC
    Senior military officers and businesspeople are to be prosecuted in Uganda for allegedly stealing the resources of neighbouring Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

    The charges stem from the long-awaited report of an independent judicial commission into Ugandan involvement in the DRC’s long conflict, chaired by British-born Justice David Porter.

    The Porter Commission report, released in Kampala on Wednesday, accuses Army Commander General James Kazini of plundering natural resources, and a stream of businesspeople for colluding and aiding in the looting.

    But the President, Yoweri Museveni, has been cleared of any involvement, along with a number of other military and civil figures accused by a United Nations panel of complicity in the looting.

    Cronies

    According to the Ugandan government, the report will spark military investigations of General Kazini and a number of his cronies, while the civil authorities will look into the charges against the civilians.

    Uganda and Rwanda’s fight over oil and diamonds in the DRC
    They include the wife of former Army Commander Lieutenant General Salim Saleh, the President’s half-brother, who is accused of complicity in widespread smuggling of blood diamonds.

    Also included in the probe are businesspeople from Uganda and also from the Middle East, suspected of running the trade on her – and other people’s – behalf.

    They, and General Kazini, are linked in the UN report to a company called the Victoria Group, which the UN panel believes is a key conduit for smuggling diamonds and minerals out of the DRC.

    But Lieutenant General Saleh himself – along with a number of other officers and civilians named as complicit by the UN panel – is exonerated of all except failing to carry out what the Commission said were orders from the President to prevent army officers exploiting their presence in the DRC.

    Off the hook

    It is little surprise to observers that Gen Kazini is carrying the can.

    A rebel soldier with a rocket-propelled grenade launcher
    Both sides are using local proxies to keep control
    Documentary evidence – in the shape of letters concerning resource looting that carry his signature – has put him squarely in the frame.

    Human rights groups and other organisations say that Mr Porter has stuck closely to the most damning evidence, but has shied away from going any further into the tangled web of relationships between soldiers, governments and businesses outlined by the UN panel’s report.

    The UN panel, for instance, was uncompromising in its insistence that Lieutenant General Saleh and a number of other figures cleared by Mr Porter were deeply complicit in both looting the DRC and setting up civilian and paramilitary organisations to carry on the plunder once they left.

    Ugandan troops finally pulled out of the North-East DRC province of Ituri in late April, leaving a power vacuum that local warring ethnic groups – each a client of either Uganda or Rwanda – have filled.

    Hundreds of thousands of civilians are known to have fled to the bush, leaving the main town, Bunia, to be over-run by paramilitaries and the local UN presence hugely outnumbered.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/3030515.stm
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4263248.stm

  3. im a ugandan im not in suport of my country being or given a sit at the un at all depending on our human rights records and attacking and looting our neighbours and neglecting the people of northern uganda particularly the abducted chilren by the lra led by j kony. the ethnic divide in uganda cannot gaurantee uganda a seat at the un.

  4. This madness has to end – there are many lessons we failed to learn for more than 6000 years, yet it is not too late. We cannot hope to achieve anything while we keep fighting among ourselves.