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26 juin 2013 3 26 /06 /juin /2013 21:02

Les morts ne se comptent plus en RDC! Le jour où le M23 a exécuté 26 agriculteurs à Busanza et Jomba, la CPI a annoncé qu'elle s'oppose à la création d’un tribunal spécial pour la RDC!

 

UN accuses Congo rebels of murdering civilians

 

http://news.yahoo.com/un-accuses-congo-rebels-murdering-civilians-143519002.html

 

GOMA, Congo

U.N. mission spokesman Col. Felix Basse said Wednesday that the M23 has mounted regular operations involving arbitrary arrests, murders and harassment of civilians. He said that at least 26 farmers had been executed between June 16 and 19 in the localities of Busanza and Jomba. The statement is among the strongest that has been made by the U.N. against the rebels.

M23 spokesman Kabashi Amani dismissed the accusations as lies.

The M23 rebels reignited Congo's dormant war in the east last fall, overrunning the strategically important city of Goma. Peace talks with the government have started and stopped numerous times since their withdrawal from the city limits last November.

 (AP) — The United Nations says the M23 rebels in Congo have been conducting regular search operations in which civilians have been murdered.

 

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26 juin 2013 3 26 /06 /juin /2013 06:03

Ne nous arrachez pas le bifteck! Les compagnies minières occidentales soumettent Kinshasa sous pression pour laisser tomber sa nouvelle législation minière!

 

Tout se passe comme si le peuple Congolais n'a pas droit au bifteck! Il n' adroit qu'aux guerres, aux massacres, aux viols, aux déplacements forcés et aux pillages!

 

Pour paraphraser Patrice Lumumba, elles veulent corrompre certains de nos compatriotes, elles contribuent à déformer la vérité et à souiller notre indépendance. Ve que nous voulons pour notre pays, son droit à une vie honorable, à une dignité sans tache, à une indépendance sans restrictions, le colonialisme belge et ses alliés occidentaux... ne le veulent pas!

 

Que le gouvernment de Joseph Kabila reste ferme! Dans chaque contrat minier, foncier, forestier, l'Etat Congolais doit garder 51% des parts et l'investisseur 49%.

 

Tou ce qui sera signe en deçà de ce contrat type revient au bradage de notre patrimoine en contre partie des commissions juteuses!!!

 

Africa Mining Intelligence:

CONGO-K

Code: the three clauses that upset lawyers
With the government about to adopt new mining legislation, lawyers representing big mining groups operating in Democratic Republic of Congo are doing their utmost to water down or otherwise alter the fresh code. (...)

 

 

 

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25 juin 2013 2 25 /06 /juin /2013 21:10
Fear as Ugandan soldiers disappear with army uniforms

 

http://www.africareview.com/News/Fear-as-Ugandan-soldiers-disappear-with-army-uniforms/-/979180/1892080/-/j1gmb5/-/index.html

 

By TABU BUTAGIRA in Kampala | Sunday, June 23   2013 at  13:23
Uganda Chief of Defence Forces Gen Katumba Wamala. He has said that an unknown number of the country's veteran soldiers returning from service in Somalia have run away with uniforms, raising fear in military circles that the combat fatigues could be misused. FILE | NATION MEDI AGROUP 

An unknown number of Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF) veterans returning from service in Somalia have run away with uniforms, raising fear in military circles that the combat fatigues could be misused.

According to the new Chief of Defence Forces, Gen Katumba Wamala, a manhunt is underway for these soldiers, who fall under Reserve Forces, because their whereabouts remain unknown.

“Some of them have left the concentration area with uniforms; we want those uniforms back because they may misuse those uniforms,” Uganda Radio Network, a local online newswire agency, quoted the army boss as having said.

The veterans are part of those recalled to duty and deployed to Somalia under the aegis of the ongoing African Union Peace-keeping Mission (Amisom) as Uganda’s 12th battle group contingent, otherwise called UGABAG 12, to confront the Al-Shabaab.

Gen Wamala added: “We call upon you (masses) to locate them, we need those uniforms, they are not supposed to have those uniforms. They can have some of the insignia like their medals of African Union, they have their scarfs of AU and some of those they can have but not a full military uniform.”

It was not clear what the army leadership fears are. There is, however, the possibility that rogue soldiers could use the military fatigues to execute robberies, if not hire or sell them to outlaws, including rebels and or al-Shabaab fighters.

Some elements in Uganda’s myriad security agencies have previously been implicated in or convicted by court for hiring guns to robbers, and turning to share the booty.

Lt Col Paddy Ankunda, the military spokesman, yesterday denied any Reserve Force member made away with army property.

“All the combat uniforms they used are with us, he said, “There is no such a thing as veterans running away [with uniforms].”

When this newspaper shared the audio clip of the general’s account with the Spokesman, he did not respond to us.

 

Plea

The soldiers had been mobilised through their command structures, which should make it possible to trace those wanted up to their villages. Instead, Gen Wamala has turned to the masses to volunteer information on the whereabouts of the ex-servicemen who took more than the desert boots and AU insignia and scarfs they were authorised to own.

“They can have the white boots, there are some boots that we give them when they go to Somalia, they are kind of desert boots. Those ones they can have. But they should not have the military uniform because then they may misuse it,” he noted.

On official retirement, soldiers are expected to surrender military weapons and other such property in their possession, and are offered ceremonial uniforms for use during national functions.

The UPDF, and particularly its elite Special Forces, has been rocked by desertions with at least 400 fleeing, some of them with loaded guns. When Daily Monitor newspaper broke the story in April, the army announced it had re-captured 100 of the deserters but provided no details.

In a lengthy investigation, the Daily Monitor established that the unprecedented wave of desertions from the SFC, whose soldiers are famously proud of their unit, was linked to work details they had been asked to carry out. Last August, SFC units were deployed from Mityana District to work on President Museveni’s Kisozi Ranch in Mpigi District.

The first batch was made up of 120 soldiers from “A” Company. They were later replaced by another unit, which was withdrawn in late March.

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25 juin 2013 2 25 /06 /juin /2013 20:33

Senegalese prize-winner rejects French visa because racism at the French embassy in Dakar

 

http://africasacountry.com/senegalese-award-winner-tells-france-to-shove-it/

 

Open letter to French consulate claims humiliation by authorities.

 

Bousso Dramé
Image via Facebook.

After winning a free trip to France, Senegalese consultant Bousso Drame is saying "No, thank you." Drame recently penned an open letter to the French consulate in Senegal claiming she was subjected to humiliating remarks and treated with suspicion when she applied for a visa. 
 
Her trip was sponsored by the French Institute of Senegal, a government-operated cultural center, as the top prize for a French language competition. In her letter, Drame claims that her experience at the consulate is representative of the treatment received by many Senegalese people when dealing with French authorities. 
 
Here are some excerpts from the letter:

Bousso Dramé is a young Senegalese woman who recently won a French language competition organized by the French Institute of Senegal. She was awarded a return flight ticket to Paris and a training in documentary film-making for winning said competition. She however renounced the whole thing after finding herself on the receiving end of vexing and humiliating comments from employees of the French Institute and of the French Consulate in Dakar.

This could have ended there and nobody would have ever known about it. But unlike those who have been in her shoes before her, Bousso Dramé penned a candid and eloquent open letter to the French Consul-General in Senegal, first published on DakarActu and later republished on Rue89, that has been making the rounds of the French-speaking African net. This letter, translated in English below with her consent, explains politely but firmly why France can keep the visa, the flight ticket and the training.

She makes clear that her decision, in her own words, is “not a sanction against individuals but against a generalized system” in which visa applicants are met with suspicion and contempt before anything else, and that she renounces “in the name of those thousands of Senegalese who deserve respect”. Those words have brought her much praise from fellow anonymous visa applicants and Africans in general. They have however been met with more interrogations than approval from French readers who have been asking what she is refering to exactly.

Indeed her letter speaks volume to those who already know what she is putting her finger on but appears elusive to those who do not. She did go into more details in the interview that she gave to Jeune Afrique. More than the clerk at the French Consulate who reportedly told her “she wasn’t paid to hand out smiles” — the kind of rudeness one can face in any (French) administration no matter who you are, it is the “recommendations” from French Institute staffers that are most telling: because she would be “representing the French Institute”, she would have to “behave” and resist “shopping temptations” despite a “very generous per diem”. The concerned White man telling the little Black girl to keep clear of his world’s niceties for fear she be bedazzled into oblivion… Sounds familiar yet?

But that’s not all. What Bousso Dramé faced was not just your run-of-the-mill neocolonial paternalism, she also got a taste of the discrimination faced by many migrants applying for visas when her request to stay three days longer than the training required, to visit friends and family, was denied. “Nobody looks like a prototype of illegal migrant,” she was told, implying that anything out of the tightly controlled schedule was suspicious activity, meant to evade the authorities and remain in France.

This kind of behavior is not just morally appalling. It also goes to show how out of touch with the reality of migrations French authorities are. Despite the pervasiveness of migrant bashing in French political discourse, all evidence points to the fact that migrants contribute more to their host country economically than they receive. In other words the idea that one more migrant in the country is one less job for a French national is deluded: it is not a zero-sum game as has been proven in the UK and in the US. In fact the reason the last OECD report found that France was currently an exception to this rule is not because there are too many migrants but because, after large numbers in the 60′s, immigration declined in the 80′s, making it more difficult to pay for the previous generation. “Raising employment levels for migrants would actually increase the fiscal well-being of countries.”

Bousso Dramé represents the future of Senegal: young, highly educated and determined. It is with people like her that France and other former colonial powers will talk and negotiate ten years from now. Singing the praises of this young new African middle class generation is easy on paper, and we have seen plenty of that recently. Yet when time comes to act on it, this generation is met with the same harrowing attitude as its forebears. Except times have changed and the Bousso Dramés of the continent are unafraid to say “no, thank you” and move on without France. As far as Senegal is concerned, this is all very good news and confirmation that the Nouveau Type de Sénégalais called forth by Y’En A Marre comes in all shapes and sizes. It is however a pity and an outrage that France has not yet come to terms with such a simple reality.

Open letter to the French consular and diplomatic authorities in Senegal: No, thank you.

To His Excellency the Consul-General, To the Director of the French Institute of Senegal,

My name is Bousso Dramé and I am a Senegalese citizen who, on this day, has decided to put pen to paper so that a message that I care deeply about can be heard loud and clear.

Out of interest for the language of Molière, I decided last April to take part in the 2013 National Spelling Competition organized by the French Institute as part the Francophonie Prizes. The competition brought together a few hundred candidates, aged 18 to 35, in the French Institutes of Dakar and Saint-Louis as well as the French Alliances of Kaolack and Ziguinchor. After some written dueling about an excerpt of L’Art Français de la Guerre [The French Art of War] by Alexis Jenni, which received the 2011 Goncourt Prize, I had the honor to be declared the winner of said competition. I was rewarded with a Dakar-Paris-Dakar flight ticket and a CultureLab training in documentary film-making at the Albert Schweitzer Centre.

During my short life, while being open as the citizen of the world that I am, I have never ceased to defend my pride of being a Black and African woman. It goes without saying that I absolutely believe in the bright future of my dear Africa. I am equally convinced of the necessity to put an end to prejudices that prevailed about Africans and Africa due to the colonial era and the difficult contemporary situation of this continent. It is high time for Africans to respect themselves and to demand they be respected by others. This vision of a certainly generous and open, but also proud and determined, Africa, demanding the respect that it is owed and that it has been denied for far too long, is a strong conviction of mine that enables me and literally carries me forward.

However, during my numerous interactions with, on the one hand, some staff members of the French Institute and, on the other hand, civil servants at the French Consulate, I have had to deal with conscending, insidious, sly and vexating behaviors and remarks. Not once, nor twice but multiple times! I have really tried to ignore these behaviors but the appalling welcome I have been greeted with at the French Consulate (a “welcome”endured by most fellow Senegalese applying for visas) has been the last straw that, unfortunately, broke the camel’s back.

As an authentic individual who does not know how to cheat, a difficult but necessary decision became an obvious one for me. An all-expenses-paid trip, even the world’s most beautiful and enchanting one, is not worth the suffering that my fellow citizens and myself endure from the French Consulate. No matter how exciting the training, and God knows this one really appealed to me, it is not worth the pain of enduring these kinds of behavior unfortunately widespread under African skies. As a matter of coherence with my own value system, I have, therefore, decided to renounce that offer, despite being granted a visa.

Renounce symbolically. Renounce in the name of those thousands of Senegalese who deserve respect, a respect they are being denied within the walls of these French representations, and on Senegalese soil moreover.

This decision is not a sanction against individuals but against a generalized system which, despite the ever-increasing list of complaints from my fellow citizens, does not seem inclined to question itself.

Furthermore, I find it particularly ironic that the partial headline of the training that I will not attend reads: “Is France still the homeland of human rights? To what point are French citizens also European cizens and cizitens of the world?” It would be, without a doubt, an interesting subject for a documentary shot from an African perspective and I hope that I will have the chance, by way of other means, to participate in a CultureLab training in the future.

I shall thank the French Institute nonetheless, for this competition initiative, which in my opinion deserves to continue to exist, and even to be held more frequently in order to stimulate the intellectual emulation between young Senegalese and for the pleasure of those who love the French language, among which I count myself.

To the lady clerk at the France Consulate’s visa counter – I do not know your name, but regarding that visa that I will not be using, let me tell you: no, thank you.

Proudly, sincerely and Africanly yours, Bousso Dramé.

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25 juin 2013 2 25 /06 /juin /2013 05:06
RDC:Un autre trophée de guerre: L'exploitation DES ENFANTS, la ressource la plus précieuse de l'Afrique par les coupes “chrétiens” stériles occidentaux sous prétexte de les adopter:
http://www.consciousbeingalliance.com/2013/06/christian-saviors-the-adoptions-industry-in-congo/

 

CHRISTIAN SAVIORS & THE ADOPTIONS INDUSTRY IN CONGO

EXPLOITING AFRICA'S MOST PRECIOUS RESOURCE: CHILDREN

First Published on : 18 June 2013

Added Content (noted): 21 June 2013

Modified Slightly: 23 June 2013

Jennifer Fierberg & Keith Harmon Snow

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24 juin 2013 1 24 /06 /juin /2013 15:22

Tour cycliste international du Congo: Les Congolais ne gagneront la vraie course que lorsqu'ils pourront fabriquer des vélos sur place en RDC pour créer des emplois!

 

Le vélo comme systeme de transport a donne le coup d'envoi au développement de la Chine, qui d'ailleurs a été surnommée "L'Empire du Vélo".

 

Au 21eme siècle, le transport dans le Congo profond se fait encore à dos d'hommes mais surtout à dos de femmes!

 

 

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24 juin 2013 1 24 /06 /juin /2013 01:19
C'est le monde à l'envers. Si un Tutsi Congolais commet un crime, il ne doit pas être arrêté comme tout citoyen tout simplement parce qu'il est intouchable Tutsi, ce qui risque d'irriter le Rwanda? Voulons-nous une justice à double vitesse au Congo?

Par Colette Braeckman

http://blog.lesoir.be/colette-braeckman/2013/06/23/goma-info-ou-intox/

CatégorieNon classé

Tout Kigali en parle et de jour en jour les informations se font plus insistantes : des dizaines, voire des centaines de jeunes Tutsis congolais auraient été arrêtés à Goma et transférés à Kinshasa d’où l’on est sans nouvelle d’eux…
Epuration ethnique, chasse au faciès, prémices de pogroms des Tutsis du Nord Kivu ? Ces informations inquiétantes méritaient vérification sur le terrain. Me Joseph Dunia, correspondant d’Amnesty International, défenseur des droits de l’homme depuis de longues années confirme que, d’après ses sources, 22 personnes, effectivement, auraient été arrêtées. Fraîchement élu bâtonnier du barreau de Goma, Me Dunia ne compte pas épargner les autorités : « dans un pays où les paysans n’ont pas accès à leur récolte, où les déplacés de guerre ne savent pas où placer leur tête pour dormir, nous pourrions, au nom des victimes, nous pourrions nous porter partie civile et assigner un Etat qui n’assure pas sa responsabilité de protéger ses citoyens… »
Alors que des représentants de la section « droits de l’homme » de la Monusco (Mission des Nations unies au Congo) font chaque jour la tournée des prisons, les chargés d’informations revoient le chiffre à la baisse : « nous avons enregistré sept arrestations, parmi lesquelles deux hommes d’affaires libanais et ces suspects ont effectivement été envoyés à Kinshasa mais on ne compte aucun Tutsi congolais parmi eux… »
Des membres éminents de la communauté des Tutsis congolais ne nous font pas état de cette « chasse au faciès » même s’ils déplorent l’échec apparent des négociations de Kampala qui laissaient espérer une solution politique. Quant aux responsables de l’ANR, l’agence nationale de renseignements, ils sont formels : « Kinshasa nous a instruit de protéger tout spécialement les Tutsis du Congo, car il ne faut pas que Kigali puisse invoquer leur protection pour justifier une éventuelle intervention. De la même manière, nos forces armées ne peuvent collaborer ni avec les combattants hutus des FDLR, ni avec les fidèles des généraux Kayumba et Karegeya, des dissidents de l’armée rwandaise… Aucun Tutsi du Nord Kivu n’a été envoyé à Kinshasa…»
D’autres sources, dûment recoupées, nous expliquent cependant le fondement de la colère de Kigali : « sept personnes ont effectivement été arrêtées, deux ressortissants du Sud Kivu, des Bashi, deux ressortissants du Nord Kivu, des Hutus, un originaire du Maniéma et deux Libanais. Ces Libanais appartiennent à la famille Bacri ; ils sont les jeunes frères du dénommé « Héritier ». Ce dernier, après avoir été impliqué en 2001, dans l’assassinat du président Laurent Désiré Kabila, avait fui au Rwanda. La famille Bacri gère le magasin « Kivu market » qui commerce beaucoup avec le Rwanda. » D’après les enquêtes policières, ces sept suspects feraient partie d’un réseau ayant opéré des recrutements en faveur du M23 et mené des actions tentant de décourager les soldats du bataillon tanzanien. Après leur arrestation, les suspects seraient passés aux aveux. Lors de la brève occupation de la ville par le M23 en novembre dernier, ces suspects auraient participé au pillage de la ville et …on aurait retrouvé chez eux des effets personnels du président Kabila dont la résidence avait été envahie… »
Par ailleurs, le démantèlement de ce réseau a été rendu possible parce que d’anciens membres du M23, appartenant à l’aile dirigée par Bosco Ntaganda et aujourd’hui réfugiés au Rwanda, auraient collaboré avec les services congolais…Cette dénonciation aurait entraîné l’arrestation au Rwanda de certains de ces transfuges dont les portables ont été saisis…
A la veille de l’entrée en action de la Brigade d’intervention africaine, cet imbroglio démontre aussi le degré de nervosité des forces de sécurité de tous les pays de la région…Une telle situation requiert la plus extrême vigilance car tout, y compris le pire, demeure possible…

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23 juin 2013 7 23 /06 /juin /2013 02:18
FLASH FLASH: NE RATEZ PAS, SULUTANI MAKENGA ENTRE LA VIE ET LA MORT,IL EST TRANSFERE EN OUGANDA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=n_4ZDGGhqDY#at=75

 

Colette Braeckman, porte-parole de Kagame, ne pipe mot. Ce genre d'info est souvent à la une de son blog!

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23 juin 2013 7 23 /06 /juin /2013 01:24
22/06/2013 à 17h:22 Par AFP
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Des mineurs travaillent dans une mine d'or à Mongwalu, dans le nord-est de la RDC.Des mineurs travaillent dans une mine d'or à Mongwalu, dans le nord-est de la RDC. © AFP

Le gouvernement congolais a accusé samedi Amnesty international de "servir des groupes d'intérêts" anti-chinois, après un récent rapport de cette ONG dénonçant les traitements infligés aux mineurs artisanaux au Katanga (sud-est).

Le gouvernement congolais a accusé samedi Amnesty international de "servir des groupes d'intérêts" anti-chinois, après un récent rapport de cette ONG dénonçant les traitements infligés aux mineurs artisanaux au Katanga (sud-est).

"Le gouvernement qui a pris acte de ces graves accusations est préoccupé par la situation des mineurs telle qu'elle ressort de ce rapport", indique un communiqué du porte-parole du gouvernement de la RDC, Lambert Mende.

Dans un rapport très détaillé publié mercredi, Amnesty avait pointé du doigt la situation des mineurs artisanaux au Katanga et leur exploitation par des sociétés concessionnaires, chinoises pour la plupart.

M. Mende s'est dit cependant "frappé par le caractère trop ciblé du rapport" d'Amnesty. "Tout porte à croire que les multiples pressions exercées sur le président Joseph Kabila pour l'amener à revoir à la baisse le volume des engagements commerciaux et industriels entre la RDC et la Chine ayant fait long feu, des groupes d'intérêts recourent vraisemblablement à des ONG internationales comme Amnesty (...)", a accusé le porte-parole.

"C'est là un cas de concurrence déloyale qui n'est pas dû au hasard au moment où notre pays est devenu le premier producteur mondial de cobalt", a affirmé M. Mende, également ministre de la communication.

Dans son rapport, Amnesty cite le cas de plusieurs entreprises mais évoque également la responsabilité de l'Etat congolais qui ne fait pas respecter le code minier et les règles qui permettraient d'éviter ces abus.



Lire l'article sur Jeuneafrique.com : La RDC accuse Amnesty de servir "des groupes d'intérêts" | Jeuneafrique.com - le premier site d'information et d'actualité sur l'Afrique 
Follow us: @jeune_afrique on Twitter | jeuneafrique1 on Facebook

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22 juin 2013 6 22 /06 /juin /2013 13:28

LA CONNEXION DE LA RDC AU CÂBLE À FIBRE OPTIQUE « OFFICIELLEMENT OPÉRATIONNELLE LE 30 JUIN 2013 »

http://lepotentielonline.com/site2/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=699:la-connexion-de-la-rdc-au-cable-a-fibre-optique-officiellement-operationnelle-le-30-juin-2013&catid=90:online-depeches&Itemid=468

 

 

Pendant ce temps, The Guardian révèle que L'agence de renseignement britannique  - la fameuse Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) - a secrètement eu accès aux câbles à fibres optiques qui transportent des appels téléphoniques du monde entier et du trafic Internet du monde entier.

 

 http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2013/jun/21/gchq-cables-secret-world-communications-nsa

 

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Présentation

  • : Congo Panorama. Le blog du soldat du peuple: Par Antoine Roger Lokongo, le Soldat du Peuple engagé dans la bataille des idées pour un Congo meilleur. Un Congo qui s'assume et devient un parténaire clé de la Chine, hier un pays sous-développé, qui, en un lapse de temps, a changé son destin en comptant sur ses propres efforts et devenu une puissance.
  • : A partir des idées de mes héros, Patrice Emery Lumumba et Laurent Désiré Kabila, je suis l'actualité politique de mon pays, la République Démocratique du Congo en partuclier et de l'Afrique en général et je donne mes commentaires. Antoine Roger Lokongo
  • Contact

Hymne des Opprimés

  Ces CPP-ci sont la lumière des ouvriers
et des paysans,
ainsi que de tout opprimé.

Il n’y a point de doute d’abattre l’exploitation et de créer une juste société.

Notre serment est de ne jamais échouer,
enjoignons toutes nos forces en un faisceau,
tenons bien nos armes dans nos mains,
car ces CPP sont la force du peuple.


Dans sa noble cause,
jamais de spoliation.

Notre lutte revendique nos droits,
quoiqu’il en coûte,
jamais de servitude.


Pour les opprimés,
la Révolution est un rempart,
son ultime but est que le peuple gouverne.

Laurent Désiré Kabila,
lâchement assassiné le 16 janvier 2001.

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