Ethiopian News and Opinion Forum


Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby Wimi » 08 Aug 2012, 18:34


By Chris McGreal

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... aid-africa

American aid to the country once called Zaire appeared to have an amazing effect. The more the US gave its ruler, Mobutu Sese Seko, the shorter Zaire's roads seemed to get. By the time Mobutu was overthrown in 1997, after two decades of American and other western largesse, his country had just about one tenth of the paved roads it had had at independence in the early Sixties. Once US aid shrank, the roads started getting longer again.

Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, began a tour of Africa this month with a thinly veiled warning that China is out to plunder the continent and its governments would do well to huddle under the protective wing of America's commitment to freedom. Clinton told an audience in Senegal that, unlike other countries:

"America will stand up for democracy and universal human rights even when it might be easier to look the other way and keep the resources flowing."


She didn't mention China by name, but everyone got the message. The US secretary of state is getting at a point made by other critics of Beijing's role in Africa: that China is so hungry for resources it does deals with authoritarian regimes and doles out aid without consideration of issues such as good governance.

That sounds an awful lot like what the US and its allies got up to for decades – with the difference that Chinese aid does sometimes deliver something tangible, such as thousands of kilometres of new roads in the former Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo. Whereas US aid mostly disappeared into Mobutu's buoyant bank accounts, or was used to buy off the army to keep him in power, China's deal with the DRC government – trading thousands of kilometres of new roads and rehabilitated railway track for copper and other minerals – is transforming lives by linking up parts of the country cut off from each other for decades except by air.

None of this happened with US and western money. US aid to Mobutu was tied up with the cold war, his support of US-backed rebels fighting Angola's Marxist government and his general hostility to communism. Barely a word was said – by successive US administrations – about Mobutu's dire human rights record. Few questions were asked about how, despite the billions of dollars thrown at Kinshasa, Mobutu went on getting richer while the people he ruled got poorer and his country's infrastructure fell apart.

Mobutu was always welcome at Ronald Reagan's White House, where the president called him "a voice of good sense and goodwill". Only after the end of the cold war did US policy shift. Washington didn't need Mobutu anymore. Finally, it could afford to talk about principles without much cost.

It was much the same story with western aid to Rwanda. Hundreds of millions were poured into the tiny country, with France leading the way, to support a regime that would ultimately resort to genocide in an attempt to hang on to power. Yet, it took the Chinese to lift towns such as Kibuye out of their isolation.

Kibuye is just 120km, or 75 miles, west from Rwanda's capital, Kigali. Twenty years ago, the journey was as much as an eight-hour drive, depending on the rains and on whether, as seemed to happen most days, a bus or lorry was stuck in the deep muddy ravines that opened up on what could only be loosely described as a road. China's road-builders changed all that, and the journey now is well under two hours – with all the benefits to trade, education and family life that brings.

The pattern across Africa was US support for ideological allies, which included Washington siding with the apartheid regime in South Africa while banning Nelson Mandela's ANC as a terrorist organisation. It also entailed funding of wars against opponents. Human rights and democracy were too often buried under the needs of cold war realpolitik, as Washington saw them.

US officials argue that "that was then", and it's different now. But is it? For sure, Washington will make a stand on "democracy and universal human rights" where it does not conflict in a major way with other interests. But where money or security are involved it's another matter.

Take Equatorial Guinea. Washington had plenty of public criticism for its appalling and bloodstained dictator, Teodoro Obiang Nguema, who has ruled since 1979. The US even pulled out its ambassador, John Bennett, in 1993 after he was accused of being a witch on state radio and threatened with violence. In his departure speech, Bennett named the regime's worst torturers and Washington closed the embassy three years later. Then, large reserves of oil were discovered in the 1990s: American companies started pumping and everything changed.

Or take Ethiopia. The US is the largest contributor of aid to Addis Ababa, which has been ruled by the same man, Meles Zenawi, for 20 years. He's received billions of dollars in aid, since American largesse rose sharply after the 9/11 attacks (from a little more than $200m a year to close to $1bn) because Washington came to regard Ethiopia as a frontline in the "war on terror", owing to the presence of Islamist fighters in neighbouring Somalia. The CIA also used Ethiopia as a base for the secret interrogation of hundreds of detainees abducted from other countries, which was likely to have involved torture.

While some of that aid money has benefited ordinary people, a Human Rights Watch report two years ago said Zenawi was "using aid to build a single-party state". It accused the ruling Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Democratic Front of exercising "total control of local and district administrators to monitor and intimidate individuals at household level" and charged that foreign governments, including the US, were colluding in this repression.

A BBC investigation last year exposed how "the Ethiopian government is using billions of dollars of development aid as a tool for political oppression." It reported that villages failing to support Zenawi are starved of food, seeds and fertiliser.

For all of Clinton's assurances, the US still finds it easier to look the other way.



Re: Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby revolutions » 08 Aug 2012, 20:06



A government which robs Tyrone to pay Zenawi can always depend on the servitude of Zenawi.



Re: Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby Awash » 08 Aug 2012, 20:11


Wimi wrote:By Chris McGreal

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... aid-africa

American aid to the country once called Zaire appeared to have an amazing effect. The more the US gave its ruler, Mobutu Sese Seko, the shorter Zaire's roads seemed to get. By the time Mobutu was overthrown in 1997, after two decades of American and other western largesse, his country had just about one tenth of the paved roads it had had at independence in the early Sixties. Once US aid shrank, the roads started getting longer again.

Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, began a tour of Africa this month with a thinly veiled warning that China is out to plunder the continent and its governments would do well to huddle under the protective wing of America's commitment to freedom. Clinton told an audience in Senegal that, unlike other countries:

"America will stand up for democracy and universal human rights even when it might be easier to look the other way and keep the resources flowing."


She didn't mention China by name, but everyone got the message. The US secretary of state is getting at a point made by other critics of Beijing's role in Africa: that China is so hungry for resources it does deals with authoritarian regimes and doles out aid without consideration of issues such as good governance.

That sounds an awful lot like what the US and its allies got up to for decades – with the difference that Chinese aid does sometimes deliver something tangible, such as thousands of kilometres of new roads in the former Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo. Whereas US aid mostly disappeared into Mobutu's buoyant bank accounts, or was used to buy off the army to keep him in power, China's deal with the DRC government – trading thousands of kilometres of new roads and rehabilitated railway track for copper and other minerals – is transforming lives by linking up parts of the country cut off from each other for decades except by air.

None of this happened with US and western money. US aid to Mobutu was tied up with the cold war, his support of US-backed rebels fighting Angola's Marxist government and his general hostility to communism. Barely a word was said – by successive US administrations – about Mobutu's dire human rights record. Few questions were asked about how, despite the billions of dollars thrown at Kinshasa, Mobutu went on getting richer while the people he ruled got poorer and his country's infrastructure fell apart.

Mobutu was always welcome at Ronald Reagan's White House, where the president called him "a voice of good sense and goodwill". Only after the end of the cold war did US policy shift. Washington didn't need Mobutu anymore. Finally, ...


That was then; this is now.
hillzmandela.jpg
hillzmandela.jpg (10.15 KiB) Viewed 3968 times

http://news.yahoo.com/clinton-urges-afr ... 46010.html

Clinton urges S. Africans to live up to Mandela
By MATTHEW LEE | Associated Press – 13 hrs ago.. .

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — South Africa must live up to the legacy left by freedom icon Nelson Mandela by promoting human rights and democracy among its neighbors and around the world, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Wednesday.

Clinton challenged students at the University of the Western Cape to look beyond their borders and export their country's ideals as espoused by Mandela, who is affectionately known as "Madiba." Clinton visited the 94-year-old Mandela at his home Monday.

"You, the young generation, are called not just to preserve the legacy of liberty that has been left to you by Madiba and by other courageous men and woman," she said.

"You are called to build on that legacy to ensure that your country fulfills its own promise and takes its place as a leader among nations and as a force for peace, opportunity, equality and democracy, and to stand up always for human rights at home and around the world," Clinton said.

Earlier Wednesday, Clinton presided over the signing of an agreement with South African health officials that will put them in the lead in administering the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief in the country.

The program has spent $3.2 billion on anti-retroviral drugs, other treatments and HIV prevention programs in South Africa since then-President George W. Bush started it in 2004. The handover will be phased in over five years.

South Africa has the highest HIV infection rate in the world, with 5.7 million people — 17.8 percent of the population — testing positive for the virus.



Re: Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby Awash » 08 Aug 2012, 20:35


Clinton named 'the one who brought snow'
2012-08-08 11:41

hillzmandela.jpg
hillzmandela.jpg (10.15 KiB) Viewed 3882 times

Hillary Clinton visits Mandela
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton praised the "beautiful" smile of her friend and former president Nelson Mandela when they met at his Qunu home. See the pictures.



Johannesburg - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been named Nimkita - “the one who brought the snow” - by her hosts in South Africa.

This comes as snow fell in all nine provinces on the same day for the first time ever.

"Nimkita will be a name that I will proudly bear," Clinton laughed.

Clinton is visiting the country with a business delegation to hold talks on strengthening trade and investment relations between South Africa and the US.

The US secretary of state told delegates at a [deleted] dinner in Pretoria that the real task of the 21st century is to expand the circle of opportunity.

"Freedom [and] democracy are great accomplishments of the 19th and 20th centuries. But now comes the hard part - how does democracy deliver?

"How does it make it possible for more and more people to enter that circle of opportunity to make lives better for themselves and their families?"

Clinton commended the work done by her South African counterpart Maite Nkoana-Mashabane in the past three years.

"We work together in order to produce results. Minister Mashabane is effective. She is effective, so grounded in the needs and aspirations of the people of South Africa," she said.

"Having these jobs is not an end in itself... they are prestigious, they carry status, people drive you around, they protect you. But having a job is not the point, it's using the job to make life better."

She announced a number of partnerships with South Africa in areas including education, small business development and the fight against HIV/Aids.

http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/Polit ... w-20120807



Re: Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby revolutions » 08 Aug 2012, 20:44



Fifteen years ago, when answering questions from American journalists, the founding father and former prime minister of Singapore Lee Kuan Yew said:



Re: Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby Hawzen » 08 Aug 2012, 20:49


revolutions wrote:
Fifteen years ago, when answering questions from American journalists, the founding father and former prime minister of Singapore Lee Kuan Yew said:
    "Your standards do not apply universally. You yourself do not apply universally, but selectively where it is cost-free."



Revu,

Wait... wait ... please! I think Adwash needs your help here. He could not understand the meaning of the quote for the obvious reason that he spent most of his time in shoe shining and door-to-door knocking professions. :lol: :lol: . Am I right Adwash ????

Dedebit is always dedebit.

R.I.P Abay Tigray.



Re: Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby Awash » 09 Aug 2012, 02:03


Don't be jealous, ugum shabo. :mrgreen:


Secretary of State Hillary Clinton dances in South Africa; watch video
http://www.examiner.com/article/secreta ... uth-africa
Hillary Clinton dances in South Africa
August 8, 2012
By: Margaret Minnick

While attending a dinner hosted by South African Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane in Johannesburg, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton took to the dance floor according to the New York Daily News.

Mrs. Clinton, dressed in an electric long blue jacket and black pants with her hair pulled back in a ponytail, looked very comfortable on the dance floor as she danced while Judith Sephuma, a jazz singer began crooning at the reception.

According to the video attached to this article, it looks as if Mrs. Clinton was the first one out of her seat and onto the dance floor. When the singer saw her dancing, she invited Mrs. Clinton to dance alongside her. Mrs. Clinton clapped and danced to the music as if she is used to making such moves.

It's customary for Mrs. Clinton to fit in with the country she is visiting. She sure made a hit this time.
Mrs. Clinton is still taking care of business but appears to be having fun during her last year of office.

“Good for you, Secretary of State Clinton."



Re: Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby revolutions » 09 Aug 2012, 04:29



Read the reaction of Adwash as posted on AIGA FORUM to Madam Secretary Clinton's refusal to visit woyane-occupied lawless Ethiopia.
:shock:

Image

Image
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:



Re: Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby Awash » 09 Aug 2012, 09:38


hilz.jpg
hilz.jpg (5.85 KiB) Viewed 1861 times

Hillz will never go back to Askaria until the tyrant is in custody. :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:
issucustody.jpg
issucustody.jpg (13.27 KiB) Viewed 1861 times



Re: Hilary Clinton's hypocrisy on human rights in Africa

Postby Zmeselo » 09 Aug 2012, 10:05


Look at this Hillz toiletpaper. She doesn´t even know U exist, nigga. She doesn´t want you to exist but for a brain- dead- aray- beles -slave- of -the -whites-azzwipe, that´s unbelievable and impossible. :lol:

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