International-UN-NGOs |
UN scales back aid goals in Somalia and Yemen |
2025-05-19 |
[ShabelleMedia] : The United Nations announced Friday it is scaling back its humanitarian aid goals in Yemen and Somalia in the latest fallout from a drastic drop in funding from member states. It said the cuts are putting millions of lives at risk around the world. In January the UN launched an appeal for $2.4 billion to help 10.5 million people in war-torn Yemen this year, far below the 19.5 million people it deems as being in need of assistance. But with funding down, the global body and its humanitarian aid partners established new priorities so as to be able to help at least the neediest people there. The UN announced similar changes in strategy in Ukraine and Democratic Republic of Congo in recent weeks. Now the focus in Yemen will be on 8.8 million people with a forecast budget of $1.4 billion, said Stephanie Tremblay, a spokeswoman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. In violent and unstable Somalia, an initial $1.4 billion plan to help 4.6 million people has also been trimmed back to $367 million for 1.3 million people, she said. “This does not mean that there’s been a reduction in overall humanitarian needs and requirements,” Tremblay said. She said huge funding cuts are forcing humanitarian aid programs to scale back, “putting millions of lives at risk across the world.” “As in other crises, the consequence will be dire. If we fail to deliver, millions more people will be acutely hungry and lack access to clean water, education, protection and other essential services,” she added. UN agencies are scaling back operations and staffing around the world as they grapple with big cuts in contributions from member states, in particular the United States under President Donald Trump. |
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-Obits- |
Mercenary and coup plotter Simon Mann dies |
2025-05-10 |
The 72-year-old made millions of pounds from protecting businesses in conflict zones before he took part in the failed attempt to overthrow the west African nation's ruler. Mann was sentenced to 34 years in prison on arms charges and later said he had been the "manager, not the architect" of the scheme. In 2009, the ex-SAS commando was pardoned, released and given 48 hours to leave the country. The plot had been an attempt to overthrow President Teodoro Obiang Nguema - at the time Mann and co-conspirators said the aim was to install exiled opposition leader Severo Moto. It was uncovered after police in Zimbabwe's capital Harare impounded a plane which had flown in from South Africa. Mann and more than 60 others were arrested, amid claims they were mercenaries. They said they were providing security for a mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Mann attended private boys' school Eton before studying at Sandhurst Royal Military Academy and then joining the Scots Guards. He became a member of the SAS - the army's special forces unit - and rose through the ranks to become a commander. In 2011, he said the attempted coup in Equatorial Guinea - which saw him arrested with fellow mercenaries after trying to load weapons onto a plane in Zimbabwe - was foiled by the CIA. After serving three years of his 34-year sentence in Zimbabwe, he was moved to Black Beach Prison in Equatorial Guinea. Speaking in 2011 about that move, he said "friends, family, and enemies" had told him "if that happens, you have had it, you're a dead man". After being pardoned and released, he expressed regret for what he had done, saying that "however good the money is", the moral case "has to stack up". Related: Simon Mann 05/22/2017 Former mercenary Simon Mann reveals thriller he wrote in jail Simon Mann 12/01/2009 President of Equatorial Guinea on course to extend three-decade rule Simon Mann 11/27/2009 The £400k Mann |
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International-UN-NGOs |
Germany halts Refugee Resettlement through UNHCR |
2025-04-10 |
[KhaamaPress] Germany has suspended its refugee resettlement program through UNHCR due to political shifts, halting future voluntary refugee intakes. Germany has temporarily suspended its refugee resettlement program through the United Nations ...an organization originally established to war on dictatorships which was promptly infiltrated by dictatorships and is now held in thrall to dictatorships... High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). The Interior Ministry of Germany announced the decision on Tuesday, April 8, stating that the program, which has been active since 2016, is currently on hold. This suspension comes at a time when a new coalition government is expected to be formed between the conservative CDU/CSU party, led by Friedrich Merz, and the Social Democratic Party. According to documents obtained by Rooters, the coalition parties have agreed to halt voluntary refugee intake programs, including the UN resettlement program, and not to launch any new programs. Since 2016, Germany has been part of the European Union ...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing... ’s resettlement scheme, which transfers refugees identified by the UNHCR in countries like ![]() , Egypt, Jordan, Kenya, and Libya to European countries. As of 2024, Germany has accepted 4,711 refugees through this program. Despite this temporary halt, Germany had committed to accepting 13,000 refugees under the program in 2024 and 2025. The Ministry of the Interior stated that cases already in advanced stages, where specific commitments have been made, will continue to be processed. The decision to suspend the program follows rising domestic pressure, particularly the increasing popularity of the far-right party, Alternative for Germany (AfD), and several The suspension of the UNHCR refugee resettlement program in Germany reflects the growing challenges faced by European countries in balancing humanitarian commitments with rising political pressures. With the formation of a new government, the future of Germany’s refugee policy remains uncertain. Many human rights ...which are usually entirely different from personal liberty... groups have criticized the move, arguing that it will reduce the support available to refugees who have already been displaced by conflict. The halt in resettlement programs also raises questions about Germany’s role in the broader European refugee crisis. |
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Africa Subsaharan | |
Experts Tell Congress: As Many as 40,000 Children Trapped in China-Dominated Africa Mining Nightmare | |
2025-03-27 | |
The experts urged American officials to act to contain the malignant Chinese influence destroying an entire generation of African children and the environment in which they live, stressing that the minerals in question – cobalt, lithium, tantalum, and copper, among others – are pivotal to any high-tech economy. The hearing, hosted by the Subcommittee on Africa and chaired by Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ), occurred as the nation of Zambia struggles to address the virtual death of the Kafue River, drowned in toxic residue when a dam holding the residue, created through Chinese copper mining activities, collapsed. Among the specific environmental threats mentioned at the hearing were the threat to the endangered okapi and the destruction of entire communities, displaced by companies looking to mine the land and polluted to the point that no one can safely return. In addition to environmental disasters, the growing presence of exploitative Chinese companies in the DRC, Zambia, Zimbabwe, and elsewhere has brought with it growing rates of child slavery as children as young as eight are forced into mines with no protective equipment, greatly endangering their lives. Furthermore, the mineral wealth and corruption is also fueling chaotic guerrilla warfare, particularly in the DRC, where rival militias regularly commit atrocities for control of the mines and violence has been exacerbated by Rwandan intervention. As of February, the death toll of the ongoing DRC conflict is estimated to be in the high thousands and the United Nations has documented a large number of instances of the use of rape as a weapon of war. The issue of child slavery in the mines featured prominently during the hearing. Sasha Lezhnev, a senior policy adviser with the Sentry, stated that, in the DRC alone, “there are an estimated 25,000 to 35,000 child miners … working at mines that send cobalt and copper to Chinese crude refiners.” “I have witnessed the horrors of child soldiers and child miners as young as eight years old at mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo,” Lezhnev shared, “as well as the warlords and corrupt companies and officials making money from this system of exploitation—all in the name of getting us cheaper smart phones, jewelry, and electric vehicles (EVs). This has got to stop.” “We see cases of child and forced labor—averaging 40,000 children–digging cobalt for Chinese buyers without adequate protective equipment and payment,” Joseph Mulala Nguramo of the Atlantic Council Scowcroft and Freedom and Prosperity Center told the subcommittee. “Some of these children are under 10 years old—leaving them exposed to toxic substances—causing serious health and environmental problems, per Amnesty International investigations.” . Nguramo described the situation of those children, as well as the lives of locals in areas affected by Chinese mines generally, as “catastrophic and unacceptable.” “In the DRC, ongoing civil unrest and an unmitigated humanitarian crisis are largely due to China’s ruthless and irresponsible grip on the country’s natural resources,” Nguramo testified. “Controlling almost 90% of the Congo Mining Sector, China has failed to use its economic and financial power to defend and promote the Rule of Law, Freedom, and Quality Governance. But China has, instead, mastered strategies to take advantage of a country in chaos—often bribing government officials to acquire Mining concessions.” The experts testified that China had spent over $10 billion buying up mines in Africa, benefitting the most so far in Zambia, the DRC, and Zimbabwe, though the Communist Party has significantly expanded its influence elsewhere in the continent, as well. The founder of the due diligence firm Accountable Africa, Thierry Dongala, noted that widespread corruption in local governments enables this colonialism and pointed to the example of Niger to show that African governments can rapidly expel offending Chinese companies if they choose to. Niger, currently under military coup regime that calls itself the “National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland,” reportedly expelled Chinese oil executives from the country in mid-March and shut down a Chinese-owned hotel for allegedly engaging in “discriminatory practices.” “The recent case of Niger expelling Chinese management shows that when African countries get serious about their moral sovereignty in their extractive industries, Chinese actors are often the first to lose,” Dongala observed. Dongala noted that local populations are well aware of the evil that illicit, slave-driven mining brings to their land, recalling that the pastor who married him to his wife conducted a “sudden sanctification prayer” to cleanse their wedding bands of evil energy, a product of their provenance, when he noticed they appeared to be made of real gold. He recommended close cooperation with locals in affected countries to track and shut down theft, slavery, and other abuses. “We’ve been monitoring the school attendance levels, that data is very valuable because we know that if we start to see the school attendance levels drops, we have to find where these kids are going,” he said of his firm. “The local school principal , the local fishers union, the mothers of the children,” he suggested, could be critical allies. Rep. Smith, chairing the hearing, noted that China’s dominance of the mining industry there, in addition to facilitating unspeakable human rights and environmental atrocities, put America at a disadvantage given the importance of the minerals in question in technology. “The reliance on China for these critical minerals is a clear vulnerability,” he emphasized in his opening remarks. “The greatest beneficiaries of this system—China’s state-owned mining companies—remain silent, refusing to confront an undeniable reality: from dirt to battery, from cobalt to cars, the entire supply chain is built on violence, exploitation, and corruption,” he continued. “This must change—and the time for change is now.” Rep. Smith recently reintroduced the COBALT Supply Chain Act, a bill that would, in its own words, “ensure that goods made using or containing cobalt refined in the People’s Republic of China do not enter the United States market under the presumption that the cobalt is extracted or processed with the use of child and forced labor in the Democratic Republic of Congo.” Rep. Smith first introduced a version of the bill in 2023. | |
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Africa Subsaharan |
Congolese military asks its troops to observe a ceasefire in the ongoing conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo |
2025-03-24 |
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Africa Subsaharan |
African war-torn nation invokes Trump ‘golden age' for minerals deal in exchange for booting violent rebels |
2025-03-22 |
[FoxNews] The president of the Democratic Republic of Congo sent a letter to President Donald Trump offering a minerals deal in exchange for a security agreement with the U.S. that would remove violent rebels from the war-torn nation. "Your election has ushered in the golden age for America," President Félix Tshisekedi wrote in February to Trump, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday. "Our partnership would provide the U.S. with a strategic advantage by securing critical minerals such as cobalt, lithium, copper and tantalum from the Democratic Republic of Congo." The Congo has over $20 trillion worth of minerals available, according to the Congo-based Panzi Foundation, including gold and copper. The African country is also the world’s largest producer of cobalt, which is essential for defense and aerospace applications, and a main component in the batteries of many electric vehicles and cellphones. Tshisekedi seeks to strike a "formal security pact" so Congo's army can defeat a Rwandan-backed rebel group called M23 in exchange for a minerals deal, the Wall Street Journal reported. The letter did not provide details on what a potential security pact would look like or operate. Related: Democratic Republic of Congo: 2025-03-17 Ukrainian Perspective: Invasion of Ukraine: March 16, 2025 Democratic Republic of Congo: 2025-03-09 Widespread killing, rape, disease and war make Democratic Republic of Congo hell on earth Democratic Republic of Congo: 2025-02-28 DRC: deadly explosion at M23 rally wounds dozens, rebel leaders say Related: Minerals 03/20/2025 Trump floats shock nuclear deal with Ukraine in call with Zelensky Minerals 03/18/2025 VDH-What Are the Left's Solutions for the Problems They Created? Minerals 03/16/2025 Ecuador pitches US military base and free trade deal to Trump allies, sources say |
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Ukrainian Perspective: Invasion of Ukraine: March 16, 2025 |
2025-03-17 |
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. Worth noting, korrespondent.net has compiled its Invasion of Ukraine series into separate months, beginning May 9th, 2023. Linked in the title. 21.05 The US plan to resolve the Russian-Ukrainian war consists of two parts: first a ceasefire, after which negotiations to end the war should take place. This was stated by US Secretary of State Mark Rubio. ![]() "Plan A is to cease fire so that we can move to Plan B, the second phase, which is to get everyone to the table, perhaps through shuttle diplomacy (through a mediator - ed.), to find a way to end this war permanently in a way that is lasting and respects the needs of everyone and so on," he explained. 20:00 Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan held a telephone conversation with American leader Donald Trump, which, in particular, touched on Russia’s war against Ukraine. In a conversation with Trump, Erdogan supported his "decisive and direct initiatives to end the war between Russia and Ukraine." 19.30 Ukraine has outlined a number of "red lines" for any peace deal with Russia, including the impossibility of handing over to Russia additional territories that are not yet occupied, The Independent reports, citing Ukrainian officials. The British publication lists Ukraine's "red lines" in possible negotiations: Refusal to transfer further territories, despite Russian dictator Vladimir Putin's desire to take back four Ukrainian regions partially occupied by Russia. The return of thousands of civilians illegally held by Russia who are not considered prisoners of war and therefore will not be included in the prisoner exchange. The need for international security guarantees in the event that Putin violates any ceasefire agreement. 18.50 Pope Francis called on believers to continue to pray for countries suffering from war, including Ukraine. "And we continue to pray for peace, especially in countries suffering from war: in martyred Ukraine, Palestine, Israel, Lebanon, Myanmar, Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo," the pontiff urged. 18.24 The current situation provides an opportunity for productive negotiations between Ukraine and Russia. This was stated by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. "It was difficult to achieve peace at first, but now the current situation provides an opportunity for meaningful and productive negotiations between Ukraine and Russia," he said. According to Modi, the war in Ukraine has brought "a lot of suffering, even the Global South has suffered." 17:50 President Volodymyr Zelensky appointed Andriy Gnatov as Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine to replace Anatoliy Bargilevich. The major general has over 27 years of military experience, commanded a marine brigade, the operational command troops to the east, and the Joint Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Bargilevich has been appointed Inspector General of the Ministry of Defense. His task is to monitor compliance with military standards and strengthen military discipline. 16.55 The UK is ready to send 10,000 troops to Ukraine . But the final number of foreign troops for Ukraine will exceed this figure. This was announced by Prime Minister Keir Starmer at a meeting of the leaders of the "coalition of the willing". 14:00 Over the past week, Russian troops have launched more than 1,020 attack drones at Ukraine , continuing to terrorize peaceful cities and communities. The massive attacks also included about 1,360 guided aerial bombs and more than 10 missiles of various types. This was announced by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky 12:50 Over the course of a week, the State Special Transport Service cleared more than 1,700 hectares of territory from explosive objects. In total, 828 dangerous objects were found and neutralized, most of which were in the Kherson region. This was reported by the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. 12.20 The Russian army struck the village of Zolotaya Balka in the Kherson region, a 40-year-old woman was killed and a 70-year-old man was injured. 11:45 Patrol police officers came under repeated fire in Chernihiv during a Russian drone attack. They were the first to arrive at the scene of the attack on March 15. 10:50 The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine has effectively confirmed the loss of Sudzha in the Kursk region , the press service of the department reported on Sunday, March 16. For more than six months, the Armed Forces of Ukraine had this Russian city under control; now it is controlled by the Russian army. 10:15 Europe may send troops to Ukraine without Moscow's consent , said French President Emmanuel Macron. 9.08 In Chernihiv, as a result of a Russian attack drone hitting a five-story residential building, two floors were partially destroyed; clearing the rubble continues. 8.30 On the night of March 16, the Ukrainian Defense Forces shot down 47 Russian drones out of 90, and another 33 enemy UAVs were lost. The enemies launched them from different types in the following directions: Millerovo, Bryansk, Shatalovo, Primorsko-Akhtarsk, Chauda. The Chernihiv, Kiev, Kharkov and Odessa regions were hit. 03.00 Finnish President Alexander Stubb has said that Russian dictator Vladimir Putin is not seeking a truce in the full-scale war against Ukraine. His main goal, namely "the destruction of Ukraine's independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity," has not changed at all. 01:30 US Secretary of State Marco Rubio had a telephone conversation with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. During the conversation, they touched on several topics. In particular, the parties discussed further steps following the recent meetings in Saudi Arabia, and also agreed to continue working to restore communication between the US and Russia. 00.15 European countries can send their troops to Ukraine without Russia's consent, French President Macron said. Instead, Putin's refusal to deploy any European forces to ensure Ukraine's security is, according to Macron, "a clear sign of a strategic existential threat." |
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Africa Subsaharan |
Widespread killing, rape, disease and war make Democratic Republic of Congo hell on earth |
2025-03-09 |
[FoxNews] State-sponsored terror, violence haunts African nation It is one of the most dangerous places in the world to be a woman – or a Christian. Disease is rampant, and children as young as 4 are being forced to work in mines. The Democratic Republic of Congo is 95% Christian, yet the faithful are being targeted by jihadists. Just last month, Islamist ADF terrorists, who want the eastern part of the country to become a Muslim Caliphate, rounded up 70 Christians and beheaded them – in a church. Women are under threat too. According to the U.N., 895 cases of rape were reported in the last two weeks of February alone – an average of more than 60 a day. In the east, "Sexual violence and human rights abuses remain rampant, as is the looting and destruction of civilian homes and businesses," Patrick Eba, deputy director of UNHCR’s Division of International Protection, said this week. Eba added that "hundreds of thousands of people (are) on the move", fleeing the violence, with many crossing into neighboring countries. Over 150 women inmates were raped, and many of them then burned to death, in Goma in October last year. As M23 rebels advanced on the city, prison guards at the local jail fled. Hundreds of male inmates are said to have jumped over a wall and raped the women, before escaping. The sick are also at risk. Earlier this week, the U.N. humanitarian affairs coordination office (OCHA) reported that armed men had raided at least two hospitals in North Kivu’s capital Goma, abducting dozens of patients. Disease also stalks people – with three mystery "outbreaks" in the past six months in the DRC. In the latest, the World Health Organization stated late last month that 60 have died and a further 1,318 have shown symptoms of suffering from an as yet unidentified serious illness in Equateur Province. The agency said the disease spreads through the body fast "with a median time from onset of symptoms to death of one day." Tests for Ebola and the Marburg virus have come back negative so far. In the Eastern Kivu provinces of the DRC, hundreds of thousands have been displaced, as rebel groups, often foreign-backed, push back government troops in a war "playing out in one of the poorest regions of earth," analyst Frans Cronje told Fox News Digital, adding, "Thousands have been killed, disease pandemics are commonplace, (and) women live under the constant fear of rape and abuse." "The conflict in the DRC is essentially about control of critical minerals", Cronje, an advisor for the Yorktown Foundation for Freedom, continued. "Scores of rebel groups and some state actors are engaged in the conflict. The two Kivu provinces contain vast deposits of these minerals that could be used in applications from defense and AI to green energy." Bill Roggio, senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and editor of the Long War Journal, told Fox News Digital, "I would argue that the minerals are only partially, or even tangentially, related. The main violence plaguing Congo runs from regional political issues, like Rwanda/M23 (rebel group), to ethnic like CODECO, (an association of militia groups) to religious, like Islamic State Central Africa Province, aka ADF, (rebel group) to just general localized banditry. And some groups do control and make money from artisanal mines, but not all." And, for more than a decade, children in some DRC areas have faced extreme exploitation and abuse, reportedly from China, forced to mine deep underground in its quest for metals such as cobalt. An estimated 70% of the world’s cobalt is produced in the DRC, according to Michigan State University’s Global Edge Research Organization. China is said to either own, or co-own with the DRC’s government, 80% of the DRC’s cobalt mines. This modern-day child slavery continues despite outcry. A report to a joint House and Senate Committee in November 2023 stated that the DRC "is a country that has been brutally pillaged throughout history, fueled by corrupt men’s unquenchable thirst for power, riches, land, rubber, copper, palm oil, and now cobalt, all at the expense of innocent women, men, and children." "Children as young as 4 are forced to mine cobalt, "Jason Isaac told Fox News Digital last year. Isaac is the founder and CEO of the American Energy Institute. The FDD’s Bill Roggio told Fox News Digital there are steps the Trump administration could take, "from counter-terrorism against one of IS' most active global branches (ISCAP) to walking back a potential massive regional war, or even to improving good governance, a more stable, secure and prosperous Congo would do wonders for the global economy and regional security." Related: Democratic Republic of Congo: 2025-02-28 DRC: deadly explosion at M23 rally wounds dozens, rebel leaders say Democratic Republic of Congo: 2025-02-23 70 Christians Beheaded in DRC and Mainstream Media Is Nowhere to Be Found Democratic Republic of Congo: 2025-02-12 At least 52 people were killed in an alleged attack by the Cooperative for the Development of Congo (CODECO) militia Related: M23 rebels: 2025-02-28 DRC: rumours of forced recruitment by M23 spark panic in Goma M23 rebels: 2025-02-28 DRC: deadly explosion at M23 rally wounds dozens, rebel leaders say M23 rebels: 2025-02-17 Cheers and confusion as M23 rebels enter Bukavu city centre Related: Goma: 2025-02-28 DRC: rumours of forced recruitment by M23 spark panic in Goma Goma: 2025-02-28 DRC: deadly explosion at M23 rally wounds dozens, rebel leaders say Goma: 2025-02-22 Rebel offensive in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo clouds future for Israeli NGO |
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Africa Subsaharan |
DRC: deadly explosion at M23 rally wounds dozens, rebel leaders say |
2025-02-28 |
[AFRICANEWS] After an explosion went off in the midst of an M23 rally in the Democratic Republic of Congo, dozens have been wounded and eleven killed, according to rebel leaders. The incident unfolded in eastern Congo's city of Bukavu. The head of the Congo River Alliance, which includes the Rwanda-backed M23 rebels, stated that the perpetrator was among the dead. ''I would like to give you here the first assessment that we have, which is that the attack caused eleven deaths, including of a woman. Verifications are in progress. The perpetrator of the attack himself is part of these deaths. There are 65 injured, including six critically,'' said Corneille Nangaa, rebel leader of the Congo River Alliance (AFC). He also accused the Congolese President of not negotiating with the rebels, saying, ''we have always expressed the wish to see a political solution to the multifaceted crisis in the Congo. And we note, unfortunately, that he (President Felix Tshisekedi) is attached to war.'' The Rwanda backed M23 rebels have rapidly advanced in the region, killing some 3000 people, and seizing key towns including Bukavu and Goma. |
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Africa Subsaharan |
70 Christians Beheaded in DRC and Mainstream Media Is Nowhere to Be Found |
2025-02-23 |
[TOWNHALL] Dozens of Christians were found beheaded in a church last week after they were kidnapped in the Democratic Republic of the Congo ...formerly the Congo Free State, Belgian Congo, Zaire, and who knows what else, not to be confused with the Brazzaville Congo aka Republic of Congo, which is much smaller and much more (for Africa) stable. DRC gave the world Patrice Lumumba and Joseph Mobutu, followed by years of tedious civil war. Its principle industry seems to be the production of corpses. With a population of about 74 million it has lots of raw material... by an Islamist murderous Moslem group. Members of the Allied Democratic Forces ![]() , a group that reportedly has ties to the Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... , came to the homes of Christians demanding they ''get out and don't make any noise.'' About 20 Christians were captured in this incident, but it's believed another 50 were captured when people from the community gathered to devise a plan to get those being held captive back. According to Open Doors, ADF then surrounded the village and captured them. "All 70 of those kidnapped were taken to a Protestant church in Kasanga where they were tragically killed. |
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Africa Subsaharan |
At least 52 people were killed in an alleged attack by the Cooperative for the Development of Congo (CODECO) militia |
2025-02-12 |
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