From 1441 to 1888, a period 450 years,
more than 29 million black Africans were terrorized and kidnapped from
their virgin homelands and transported across the different oceans as
slaves in a carefully planned operation. It was meticulous, discreet and
handled by players who knew what would exactly follow. Though the exact
number of victims will never be known, the degree of savage cruelty
endured, and the consequences the barbaric trade left for Africa will
never go away. Unfortunately today Africans themselves have forgotten
the human plunder and mass atrocities against black Africans.
As seen from this photo, these are child slaves. These teenagers are barely 18 years indicative of the child genocide
The
owners of transatlantic ships made a fortune. Slavery created and then
relied on a large support network of shipping services, ports, and
finance and insurance companies. New industries were created, processing
the raw materials harvested or extracted by slaves in the Americas.
Along the west coast of Africa, from the Cameroons in the south to
Senegal in the north, Invaders built ‘Doors Of No Return’ at Goree
Island (Senegal), Bagamoyo and Zanzibar (Tanzania), Island of
Mozambique, and hundreds others around Africa’s coast. These forts were
no different from abattoirs for butchering Africans.
Africans
were often treated like beasts during the crossing. Because a small
crew had to control so many, cruel measures such as iron muzzles and
whippings were used to control slaves. Over the centuries, at least
three million persons died in the Atlantic crossing alone. This meant
that the living were often chained to the dead until the corpses were
thrown overboard. And then suddenly as the Africans got to understand
the scale by looking at the petit materials exchanged for their
children, the slave traders needed a new source of income.
The
cruelty of the torture is all vivid for all to see. This slave
identified as Gordon endured beatings beyond human comprehension from
the state of Mississippi
By 1870,
just about 10% of the continent was under direct European control, with
Algeria held by France, the Cape Colony and Natal (both in today’s
liberated South Africa) by Britain, and Angola by Portugal. And yet by
1900, European nations had added almost 10 million square miles of
Africa – one-fifth of the land mass of the globe – to their overseas
colonial possessions. Invaders ruled more than 90% of the African
continent.
Blame it all on the Arabs!
The rebellious slaves were give a different form of punishment like this aboard a slave ship during the Atlantic
One
of the chief justifications for this so-called ‘scramble for Africa’
was a fake desire to stamp out slavery. The Invaders and Americans, the
sole beneficiaries of the barbaric abuse of Africans, had to find
somebody to blame. In May 1873 at Ilala in central Africa, celebrated
colonial mastermind David Livingstone opened the blame phase by claiming
slave trade had to be stopped because the Arabs inhumanely treated
Africans. Livingstone even had a better formula of how to “liberate”
Africa using the ‘three Cs’: commerce, Christianity and civilization. It
is from this chemistry of “Cs” that Africa has ended up inhuman
economic ghost it is today.
In a New York Times Op-Ed (22nd
April 2010), author Henry Louis Gates Jr wrote: “While we are all
familiar with the role played by the United States and the European
colonial powers … there is very little discussion of the role Africans
themselves played. And that role, it turns out, was a considerable one,
especially for the slave-trading kingdoms of western and central
Africa.”
The slave trader’s
descendants are telling us ‘we had nothing to do with your demise’,
blame it on yourselves. Why do Africans have to accept this state of
affairs? Why do Africans in the first place teach this kind of twisted
history to their descendants? If the “slave-trading kingdoms” as author
Henry Louis Gates Jr calls them, were to blame, then why were Kings like
Kabalega of Buganda banished? Why were tens of thousands of Mau Mau
Kenyans slaughtered? Here is why; the next phase of the European
orchestrated genocide was in the making; colonialism!
In
Uganda, the 1900 Buganda agreement stated that the British laws imposed
on Uganda would not be applicable over Buganda “in so far as they may
in any particular conflict with the terms of this Agreement in which
case the terms of this Agreement will constitute a special exception”.
The Baganda were blinded to believe that their Kingdom was superior to
all the others, and above all, Uganda. The strategy had worked!
By
1960 Buganda had outlived its usefulness. Six years later, Kabaka
Mutesa II was deposed as Kabaka, and deported out of Uganda by the
Northerners headed by Milton Obote. The north was the new poster boy as
they had the guns because they were the army. The Kabaka died a lonely
death in 1969 at a flat in London. Obote would also later learn that he
was only a pawn on a much bigger chess board. At a Commonwealth summit
in Singapore held from January 14 to 22, 1971, British Prime Minister
Edward Heath stated that “those who are condemning the British sale of
arms to South Africa, some of them will not go back to their countries.”
The British had clearly orchestrated the coup against Obote and
replaced with Idi Amin, one of the most barbaric criminals who they
viewed as “someone we could do business with”.
In
Algeria, nearly 2million Algerian Muslim Arabs were tortured and
massacred as they fought to kick out their colonial master France who
pumped Algerian oil out of their country like it was a gas station in
Paris. Independence leaders were assassinated and more controllable
brands were installed, only to also be thrown out in similar fashion.
The same script took place across all Africa.
Moving
further afield, the same anti-people forces silenced the American civil
rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. It really isn’t that surprising a
thing to expect the power-givers and takers to kill someone who
threatened their authority and had the power to organize millions to
protest it. Tens of millions joined his campaign against poverty wages
and ruthless working conditions. Dr King fought against unending wars.
It is his power to organize protests that threatened UNCLE SAM’s
interests as they were profiting from the wars. When the human cargo was
loaded onto the ships, the slave traders took off the ballast they’d
brought from England. The pebbles are still scattered all over the
shores of Bunce Island, in Sierra Leone.
Vultures fighting for Rotting Congo
Today,
the immediate exploitation of “success” against the M23, by combined
force of all sorts of armies, has been to voice concern against the
disarmament of the FDLR by the neo-colonialist. The little-known «
Kanyarwanda war » was the first public display of anti-Tutsi sentiment
in post-independence Zaire. It lasted from 1963 to 1966 and resulted in
large-scale massacres orchestrated by the politicians installed in
Kinshasa. The war focus was the newly created “provincette” of North
Kivu, one of the three entities that once formed Kivu province.
The
crisis in east DR Congo has suddenly taken a different turn as M23
group is defeated militarily. One wonders whose victory this is –
Congo’s army (FARDC), Rwandan rebels FDLR, the United Nations or just
one of those battles won by the colonialist governors eager for another
slice from part of rotting Africa. To have a better understanding of
what happened in east DRC in the past 20 months, we should not lose
sight of 1994 when the pitched battles of the interahamwe genocide
militia were explained as criminals carrying out isolated mass killings.
It was not until the genocide against Tutsis had been stopped that the
world understood the scale. The genocide ideology was designed and
nurtured by the same neo-colonialists particularly the French and
Belgians until its unsuccessful conclusion.
Twenty
years on, the FDLR genocide militias have exploited unwarranted
sympathy that has been publicized by the very colonialist forces whose
primary investment is to use them as political and military mercenaries
against a small African nation of Rwanda. As has been the agenda over
the past 20 years, the immediate benefit will be another attempt to
re-ignite the unfinished genocide.
At
the 1971 UN General Assembly as the seeds of genocide ideology were
sowing, Rwanda President Gregoire Kayibanda delivered this message: “The
Hutu and Tutsis are two nations in a single state… Two nations between
whom there is no intercourse and no sympathy, which are as ignorant of
each other’s habits, thoughts, feelings as if they were dwellers of
different zones or inhabitants of different planets”.
Ironically,
the closest aide of the same President Kayibanda, his wife, was a so
called “Tutsi”. She had prepared his briefcase carrying the writing pad
in which the same message condemning her was stored. Despite the openly
genocide statement, nobody raised a finger, and Kayibanda’s godfathers
shook their heads in approval. Their plan was going as designed!
The
same colonialists created an occupation army with 22,000 men in uniform
and costing $1.4 billion a year, the world’s biggest and most expensive
peacekeeping operation. When FDLR trounced on villagers, nobody said
anything, but when Tutsis rise up against abuses targeted at them, the
same MONUSCO, suddenly has exploding love for “civilians”! What else can
this state of affairs be described other than pure double standards at
best?
Africa’s unsung heroes
In
Zaire, the powers-be eliminated Patrice Lumumba in January 1961 because
he wanted total independence of his country. The lives of African
liberators Rwagasole of Burundi, Abdel Nasser of Egypt and John Muhima
Kale of Uganda were decimated by the same forces that remain determined
to keep Africa a victim of colonial horror.
According
the Daily Monitor article of Dec. 2nd 2012, from Egypy Kale went to the
UN General Assembly and submitted a petition for the UN Trusteeship to
prepare Rwanda-Burundi for independence. Kale successfully defended the
Rwanda-Burundi independence petition on November 17, 1958 and December
5, 1958, to start the independence programme. Kale was banned by the
Belgians from ever stepping in Rwanda. He told the UN that Rwanda had no
political borders and its people historically moved to and from within
the region. That the Rwanda problem was political borders imposition and
rearing Rwandans as labourers for Belgians in Congo. Kale died in a
plane crash on August 17, 1960 at Kiev, Ukraine, on his way to Moscow,
in the then Soviet Union. UNCLE SAM’s weapon of colonialism refused him a
platform. His anti-colonial campaigns linked him close to other Pan
Africanists like former Egypt’s President Abdul Nasser Jamal.
John Kalekezi at his Uganda National Congress office in Cairo Egypt
The
Kenyan Mau Mau independence movement was eviscerated like rats. At the
peak of their struggle, in April 1952, on Sir Evelyn Baring orders,
200,000 Kenyans were round up into 150 concentration camps littered
around Kenya. The routine was severe beatings and assaults in systemized
violence which had been approved at the highest levels of the British
Government. In the course of interrogations guards would hang detainees
upside down and insert sand and water into their anuses. And when the
victims of these heinous sought redress in London court recently, all we
could see was a media stampede to sanitise Britain.
Why
does the world choose to be shamelessly selective in defining and
condemning the minimum norms of human rights? How can we allow the
colonialists to take us back to the dark days of African patriots whose
demise facilitated unhindered proliferation of undemocratic forces and
freelance spread of genocide ideology in the region? Why do these
adventurists want to remind us of the barbaric acts of slave trade whose
museum in Freetown is a display of what was left from their industrial
dividends?
The neo-colonialists have
occupied sovereign nations in the name of promoting democracy, but when
people of Kenya elect their leaders, the goal posts are moved. The so
called democracy is undermined with push for prosecution at the
International Criminal Court. When will legitimate vote of a people
count? Why should they vote, and then suddenly, the vote doesn’t count!
There is no doubt the ICC was designed to target Africa and remains the
most demeaning neo-colonialist instrument.
One of the 150 concentration camps to which Mau Mau freedom fighters were banished
Genocidal forces are now the victims!
The
fundamental reason for the poverty and underdevelopment of Africa – and
of almost all “third world” countries – is neo-colonialism. The agents
of the system will do everything possible to hide their guilt because
they don’t want the young generations to learn and know the history. It
is the same agents that have kept a lid over the 1994 genocide against
Tutsis in Rwanda, a creation of the French establishment, by financing
the genocide negationist lobby.
French
officers directly commanded the pitched battles against the Rwandese
Patriotic Army (RPA) which was single-handedly struggling to stop the
genocide. Instead of condemning and silencing the interahamwe guns which
were slaughtering children, the interahamwe supporters were commanding
the genocide militia to counter the RPA advance! So the French were
fighting to save the killers and destroy the dead! The French and
Belgians have never hidden their antipathy to the RPF. The French
allowed thousands of known genocidaires, to transit the Zone Turquoise,
escaping the tightening noose of the RPA.
The
killers reinvented themselves as leaders of refugee camps, supported by
international aid agencies, under UNHCR auspices. International
obligations under the humanitarian law and the Genocide Convention were
subjugated to a general desire to save lives. The guilty were fed
alongside the thousands of children whose images haunted Western
television viewers. The administrative structures that had facilitated
the massacres of Tutsis in Rwanda were reproduced in the camps.
A
similar explanation is being advanced in an effort to sanitise the
FDLR. Their neo-colonial supporters are explaining their existence as a
force that has evolved and currently comprises people who were born
after the genocide.
In the next
episode of this text, I will pinpoint in detail the economic plunder of
Africa is taking place from DR Congo, Kenya, and Gabon to Chad, Mali,
and down to Angola. As the continent is swept clean of any resources,
the poor Africans are left to the dogs. I will ask why King Leopold
policy of chopping off the hands of hundreds of thousands of Congolese
for rubber is being silenced.
by Dr Igban K. Adetunji
Source: Qatar Chronicle
Wish i could understand what you are actually saying - what is your point?
ReplyDeleteWhere does recycling come in?
Genocidal forces are now the victims?
President Kayibanda as the 'same colonialist ??
It seems like you have a lot of knowledge/ information - but please, get a copy editor to check through before posting.
PS - It also seems that by being stuck in the past - you are failing to see what is actually happening right NOW.. So many Africans being drawn voluntarily to the current super power - willingly paying the transportation to the west - the west that prints pieces of paper called dollars to exchange for the same commodities & resources that were historically taken by more blatent and violent means
dave(at)solarsense(co.uk) - yes a white guy