Geheime oorlogvoering van de VS in Afrika duurt voort, het aantal VS operaties in Afrika is zelfs groter dan in het Midden-Oosten

Het bericht met deels de bovenstaande kop lag tot mijn schaamte nog op de stapel concepten, ik vond het terug bij nazoeken van een artikel dat afgelopen woensdag werd gepubliceerd op Vice News door Nick Turse, het eerdere artikel van dezelfde schrijver is getiteld: ‘U.S. SECRET WARS IN AFRICA RAGE ON, DESPITE TALK OF DOWNSIZING’. Zoals gezegd: afgelopen woensdag publiceerde Turse het ander artikel over de VS oorlogsvoering in Afrika, dit keer met de titel: ‘EXCLUSIVE: THE U.S. HAS MORE MILITARY OPERATIONS IN AFRICA THAN THE MIDDLE EAST’. Als eerste het artikel van Turse dat op 26 juli jl. werd gepubliceerd, daarna een korte inleiding tot het laatste artikel van Turse. (waarin wordt gesteld dat de militaire operaties in de VS niet geheim moeten worden gehouden en dat door een hoge VS militair)

Oktober
vorig jaar liepen 4 VS militairen in een hinderlaag waarbij ze
omkwamen, dit gaf nogal wat ophef in de VS, waarop het Pentagon
aangaf het aantal troepen in Afrika te verminderen…

Niet
eens een jaar later blijkt er van dit voornemen, troepenvermindering
in Afrika, niets terecht te zijn gekomen……. De VS vecht (dat
vechten wordt ontkend, ondanks alle bewijzen daarvoor, zoals de 4
militairen die in Niger werden gedood) in de volgende Afrikaanse
landen Kameroen,
Kenia, Libië, Mali, Mauritanië, Niger, Somalië en Tunesië…

Vreemd ook dat in het rijtje landen Zuid-Soedan ontbreekt, terwijl ook daar VS militairen opereren……. De president van Soedan, Omar al-Bashir, is bepaald geen vriend van de VS en ondanks dat de VS een wapenembargo heeft ingesteld tegen Zuid-Soedan*, werkt de VS, in het ‘niet-zo-geheim’, samen met het terreurbewind in Zuid-Soedan…….

Generaal
Thomas Waldhauser, hoofd Africa Command (AFRICOM), zei tijdens een Pentagon
conferentie afgelopen mei, dat ondanks alle moeilijkheden de VS
militairen hun werk geweldig 
doen over het hele continent Afrika……. (beter had hij gezegd: dat de VS militairen hun werk uiterst gewelddadig doen, immers het gaat om grootschalige terreur in landen waar de VS niets te zoeken heeft, terreur waarmee de VS zelfs terreur kweekt! Tja als je dat erbij zou zeggen kan je moeilijk volhouden dat de VS goed werk verricht in Afrika….) 

Lees
het volgende artikel van Nick Turse, zoals eerder geplaatst op
The Intercept:

U.S.
SECRET WARS IN AFRICA RAGE ON, DESPITE TALK OF DOWNSIZING

 Nick
Turse
July
26 2018, 7:15 p.m.

An American Special Forces soldier trains Nigerien troops during an exercise on the Air Base 201 compound, in Agadez, Niger, April 14, 2018. Hundreds of American troops are working feverishly to complete a $110 million airfield that will be used to strike extremists in West and North Africa, a region where most Americans have no idea the country is fighting. (Tara Todras-Whitehill/The New York Times)

LAST
OCTOBER, FOUR
 U.S. soldiers – including two
commandos – were killed in an ambush in Niger. Since then, talk of
U.S. special operations in Africa has centered on missions being
curtailed and troop levels cut.

Press
accounts have suggested that 
the
number of special operators on the front lines has been reduced
,
with the head of U.S. Special Operations forces in Africa directing
his troops to 
take
fewer risks
.
At the same time, a “
sweeping
Pentagon review

of special ops missions on the continent may result in drastic cuts
in the number of commandos operating there. U.S. Africa Command has
apparently been asked to consider the impact on counterterrorism
operations of 
cutting
the number of Green Berets, Navy SEALs, and other commandos
 by
25 percent over 18 months and 50 percent over three years.

Analysts have
already stepped forward to 
question or criticize the
proposed cuts.

Anybody
that knows me knows that I would disagree with any downsizing in
Africa,”

Donald
Bolduc, a former chief of U.S. commandos on the continent, 
told
Voice of America
.

While
the review was reportedly ordered this spring and troop reductions
may be coming, there is no evidence yet of massive cuts, gradual
reductions, or any downsizing whatsoever. In fact, the number of
commandos operating on the continent has barely budged since 2017.
Nearly 10 months after the debacle in Niger, the tally of special
operators in Africa remains essentially unchanged.

According
to figures provided to The Intercept by U.S. Special Operations
Command (SOCOM), 16.5 percent of commandos overseas are deployed in Africa.
This is about the same percentage of special operators sent to
the continent in 2017 and represents a major increase over
deployments during the first decade of the post-9/11 war on terror.
In 2006, for example, 
just
1 percent of all U.S. commandos deployed overseas were in
Africa
 –
fewer than in the Middle East, the Pacific, Europe, or Latin America.
By 2010, the number had risen only slightly, to 3 percent.

Today,
more U.S. commandos are deployed to Africa than to any other region
of the world except the Middle East. Back in 2006, there were only 
70
special operators deployed across Africa
.
Just four years ago, there were still just 700 elite troops on the
continent. Given that an average of 8,300 commandos are deployed
overseas in any given week, according to SOCOM spokesperson Ken
McGraw, we can surmise that roughly 1,370 Green Berets, Navy SEALs,
or other elite forces are currently operating in Africa.

The
Pentagon won’t say how many commandos are still deployed in Niger,
but the total number of troops operating there is roughly the same as
in October 2017 when two Green Berets and two fellow soldiers
were 
killed
by Islamic State militants
.
There are 800 Defense Department personnel currently deployed to the
West African nation, according to Maj. Sheryll Klinkel, a Pentagon
spokesperson. “I can’t give a breakdown of SOF there, but it’s
a fraction of the overall force,” she told The Intercept. There are
now also 
500
American military personnel
 –
including Special Operations forces — in Somalia.  At the
beginning of last year, AFRICOM told Stars and Stripes, 
there
were only 100
.

None
of these special operations forces are intended to be 
engaged
in direct combat operations
,”
said Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security
Affairs Robert S. Karem, while speaking about current troop levels in
Niger during a May Pentagon press briefing on the investigation into
the deadly October ambush. Despite this official policy, despite the
deaths in Niger, and despite the supposed curbs on special operations
in Africa, U.S. commandos there keep finding themselves in situations
that are indistinguishable from combat.

In
December, for example, Green Berets fighting alongside local forces
in Niger reportedly 
killed
11 ISIS militants
 in
a firefight. And last month in Somalia, a member of the Special
Operations forces, 
Staff
Sgt. Alexander Conrad, was killed
 and
four other Americans were wounded in an attack by members of the
Islamist militant group Shabaab. Conrad’s was the second death of a
U.S. special operator in Somalia in 13 months. Last May, a Navy
SEAL, 
Senior
Chief Petty Officer Kyle Milliken, was killed
,
and two other American troops were wounded while carrying out a
mission there with local forces.

Between
2015 and 2017, there were also 
at
least 10 previously unreported attacks
 on
American troops in West Africa, the New York Times revealed in March.
Meanwhile, Politico recently reported that, for at least five years,
Green Berets, Navy SEALs, and other commandos — operating under a
little-understood budgetary authority known as Section 127e that
funds classified programs — 
have
been involved in reconnaissance and “direct action” combat
raids
 with
local forces in Cameroon, Kenya, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Niger,
Somalia, and Tunisia. Indeed, in a 2015 briefing obtained by The
Intercept, Bolduc, then the special ops chief in Africa, noted that
America’s commandos were not only conducting “surrogate” and
“combined” “counter violent extremist operations,” but also
“unilateral” missions.

While
media reports have focused on the possibility of imminent reductions,
the number of commandos deployed in Africa is nonetheless up 96
percent since 2014 and remains fundamentally unchanged since the
deadly 2017 ambush in Niger. And as the June death of Conrad in
Somalia indicates, commandos are still operating in hazardous areas.
Indeed, at the May Pentagon briefing, Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, the
chief of U.S. Africa Command, drew attention to special operators’
“high-risk missions” under “extreme conditions” in Africa. 
America’s commandos, he said, “are doing 
a
fantastic job across the continent
.”

Top
photo: An American Special Forces soldier trains Nigerien troops
during an exercise on the Air Base 201 compound, in Agadez, Niger, on
April 14, 2018.

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depend on the support of readers like you to help keep our nonprofit
newsroom strong and independent. 
Join Us 

*
Volgens de NRC exporteerde de VS al minimaal wapens naar
Zuid-Soedan…… ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! Het is de redactie blijkbaar
nog niet opgevallen dat de VS ook via omwegen een land vol kan
proppen met wapens (zoals de CIA al zo vaak heeft geregeld), desnoods (of zelfs het liefst) aan elkaar
bekampende groeperingen……

========================================

De VS heeft meer militaire operaties
in Afrika dan in Midden-Oosten

Hier het tweede artikel van Nick Turse op Vice News, een artikel dat zoals gezegd afgelopen woensdag werd gepubliceerd. Met iets meer actuele informatie. Gezegd moet worden dat Turse bij de aanvang van dit bericht een fout maakt, hij doelt duidelijk op een hinderlaag die in oktober 2017 plaatsvond, terwijl je uit z’n schrijven zou kunnen opmaken dat het om oktober 2018 gaat, in het artikel hierboven wordt ook oktober 2017 aangehaald.

In dit bericht schrijft Turse over het grote aantal militaire operaties die de VS uitvoert in Afrika, operaties die de operaties van de VS in het Midden-Oosten ver overtreffen, al is het aantal VS militairen in het Midden-Oosten veel groter.

Mijn excuus voor de belabberde weergave, krijg het niet op orde.

EXCLUSIVE:
THE U.S. HAS MORE MILITARY OPERATIONS IN AFRICA THAN THE MIDDLE EAST

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor EXCLUSIVE: THE U.S. HAS MORE MILITARY OPERATIONS IN AFRICA THAN THE MIDDLE EAST

By Nick
Turse
 Dec
12, 2018

The
deadly ambush in Niger last October that left four U.S. serviceman
dead prompted months of hand-wringing inside the Pentagon. But that
botched operation, which drew national attention to U.S.
counterterror operations throughout Africa should not have shocked
military leadership, the former commander of U.S. Special Operations
forces in Africa told VICE News.

These
weren’t the first casualties, either. We had them in Somalia and
Kenya,” said retired Brig. Gen. Donald Bolduc, who served as
commander of Special Operations Command Africa (SOCAFRICA) from 
April
2015
 to June
2017
,
in an interview with VICE News. “We had them in Tunisia. We had
them in Mali. We had them in Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon, and Chad. But
those were kept as quiet as possible. Nobody talked about it.”

Indeed,
two separate military efforts — named Juniper Shield and Obsidian
Nomad — that were 
set
to intersect but failed
 to
on the night of the deadly ambush near Tongo Tongo in Niger were part
of a pattern of expansion on the African continent that has made it
the most active U.S. military theatre in the world. The United States
has conducted more than 30 named operations and activities in Africa
over the last three years, according to documents obtained by VICE
News. While more troops are deployed to, and engaged in combat in,
the Greater Middle East, the sheer number of named efforts in Africa
actually surpasses that region.

VICE
News reviewed documents from the U.S. Army, Africa Command, and
Special Operations Command Africa, and conducted interviews with
current and former military personnel and experts familiar with
America’s “war on terror” in Africa. These documents and
testimony paint a startling picture of a sprawling, labyrinthine, and
at times chaotic shadow war on the African continent, in which
commandos are endangered by a lack of resources and “assistance”
operations blur with combat.

Africa
has more named operations than any other theater, including CENTCOM
[the command that oversees the Middle East],” Buldoc confirmed to
VICE News. “But remains under-resourced for doing what it’s been
directed to do.”

SECRETIVE
AND SPRAWLING

In
2017, U.S. troops carried out an average of nearly 10 missions per
day —
3,500
exercises, programs, and engagements for the year
 —
across the African continent, according to Gen. Thomas Waldhauser,
the AFRICOM commander.

These
efforts — carried out in at least 
33
countries
 —
range from capture-or-kill commando raids to more banal training
missions. Americans are also gathering intelligence, involved in
surveillance and reconnaissance missions carried out by drones,
engaged in construction projects, and accompanying allies on tactical
operations.

There
are also now 
34
U.S. military outposts
 on
the continent, concentrated in the north and west and the Horn of
Africa, according to a recent report by The Intercept.

US operations Africa

This
March 2018 briefing authored by Africa Command Science Advisor Peter
Teil outlines current U.S. military operations throughout the African
continent. (Nick Turse for VICE News).

Through
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), AFRICOM provided VICE News
with a list of 21 named operations conducted between January 1, 2016
and September 25, 2018. According to a separate March 2018 briefing,
authored by Africa Command Science Advisor Peter Teil and also
obtained via FOIA, eight current operations in North and West Africa
were aimed at countering the Islamic State and Boko Haram and
assisting local allies and French counterterrorism efforts. Six
operations in East Africa focused on defeating al Shabaab, assisting
the African Union Mission in Somalia, and counter-piracy. Two
theater-wide efforts focused on crisis response in the event U.S.
government personnel or facilities are threatened, while one
operation — Echo Casemate — provides support to French and U.N.
forces in the troubled Central African Republic.

A
separate Defense Department document, marked “For Official Use
Only,” that appears to have been posted online inadvertently, lists
12 named activities not on AFRICOM’s list, including eight in the
east and another four in the northwest.

Taken
together, these documents represent the most current and complete
record of named U.S. operations and activities recently conducted on
the continent, offering a window into a collection of
little-understood, often overlapping, military efforts unknown to
most Americans.

SPREAD
THIN, AND BLURRING LINES

US operations Africa

Somali
soldiers are on patrol at Sanguuni military base, where an American
special operations soldier was killed by a mortar attack on June 8,
about 450 km south of Mogadishu, Somalia, on June 13, 2018. – More
than 500 American forces are partnering with African Union Mission to
Somalia (AMISOM) and Somali national security forces in
counterterrorism operations, and have conducted frequent raids and
drone strikes on Al-Shabaab training camps throughout Somalia.
(MOHAMED ABDIWAHAB/AFP/Getty Images).

The
proliferation of so many concurrent counterterrorism efforts courts
danger, said Bill (William) Hartung, the director of the Arms and Security
Project at the Center for International Policy (ASPCIP).

Running
so many operations with combat implications without making them known
to the American public is both unwise and ultimately undemocratic. It
is no way to run foreign policy in a democracy,” he said. “And
running sensitive operations that are secret, or simply not widely
publicized, increases the risks of failure, because they are not
subject to public debate or adequate scrutiny.”

Bolduc
also criticized the lack of transparency on the part of AFRICOM.
“What we’re doing shouldn’t be a mystery,” he said.

Alice
Hunt Friend, the principal director for African affairs in the Office
of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy from 2012 to 2014, said
the risks are compounded by the way these operations tend to blur
between “assistance” and combat.

If
the primary military activity in a country is assistance, then as we
saw in Niger, U.S. combat-related resources are not readily on hand,”
Friend explained.

Among
the operations that provide “assistance” are the classified 127e
programs. These secretive efforts are “aimed at assisting foreign
forces who support U.S. counterterrorism operations,” said Friend.

But
these activities often consist of far more than assistance, said
Bolduc. Classified 127e programs are “direct action” efforts,
which are defined by the Pentagon as “short-duration strikes and
other small-scale offensive actions conducted as a special operation
in hostile, denied, or diplomatically sensitive environments.”

Such
direct-action missions were carried out in Cameroon, Kenya, Libya,
Mali, Niger, Somalia, and Tunisia in recent years, as well as two
nations where the 127e programs have now ended, Ethiopia and
Mauritania, said Bolduc.

US operations Africa

Through
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), AFRICOM provided VICE News
with a list of 21 named operations conducted between January 1, 2016
and September 25, 2018. Above is the list. (Nick Turse for VICE
News.)

The
Department of Defense declined to provide details about these
activities because many were “ongoing,” said Navy Commander
Candice Tresch, a Pentagon spokesperson.

We
are extremely lucky that there have not been more situations like
Niger,” said Hartung. “Running dozens of missions where U.S.
troops are liable to be thrust into combat roles is an extremely
risky approach, putting both their lives and our interests at risk.”

Buldoc
expressed particular concern over what he explained was a persistent
lack of support from the Pentagon. “When I left command, I had 96
missions and 886 tasks associated with those missions in 28 different
countries, in an area that was two and a half times the size of the
United States,” Bolduc said. “I was under-resourced in personnel
recovery. I was under-resourced in ISR [intelligence, surveillance,
and reconnaissance assets]. And I was under resourced in medical
support — the three key things that I needed.”

For
years, the special operations community and its 
supporters have
expressed concern over 
deployment
rates, 
operations
tempo, and the amount of resources being allocated to direct action
missions. “Most SOF units are employed to their sustainable
limit,” 
General
Raymond Thomas
 (III), the Special Operations Command chief, told members of Congress last
spring.

In
June, the New York Times reported that Secretary of Defense James
Mattis and Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, had grown concerned that commandos across the globe
were 
spread
too thin
.
And the resources afforded to the team ambushed in Niger in 2017, for
example — who relied on contracted medical evacuation services,
French airpower, and lightly armored vehicles — have been
criticized as inadequate and dangerous.

Bolduc,
the former SOCAFRICA commander, laid much of the blame of the Niger
ambush on such deficits and a failure to adequately support local
allies. “That lack of resources — as well as fundamentally
misunderstanding the environment, the situation, and the threat —
meant that we were unable to help our partners solve a regional
problem. Because we didn’t provide an adequate military and
security response, the threat got stronger and more effective. The
direct result was the ambush of our SOF team in October 2017.”

Africa
Command’s official investigation, however, concluded that the “direct
cause of the enemy attack in Tongo Tongo is that the enemy achieved
tactical surprise there, and our forces were outnumbered
approximately three to one,” according to AFRICOM’s former chief
of staff, and now the head of the U.S. Army in Africa, Maj. Gen.
Roger Cloutier.

DRAWING
DOWN — SORT OF

The
Pentagon told VICE News that the total number of troops assigned to
AFRICOM — about 7,200 personnel — would be cut by less than 10
percent over several years, as it reviews its priority areas on the
continent and reorients itself toward great power rivals.

There
are, by comparison, roughly 
24,000
troops
 deployed
to Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria, although President Trump recently
suggested that U.S. troops might be 
withdrawn from
the Middle East due to lower oil prices.

US military operations Africa

President
Donald Trump with, from left, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Trump,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Joseph Dunford and Marine
Corps Commandant Gen. Robert Neller, speaks during a briefing with
senior military leaders in the Cabinet Room at the White House in
Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Pentagon
spokesperson Tresch said that the ambush in Niger had nothing to do
with the Defense Department’s decision to modestly decrease troop
levels in Africa. She said the move is predicated on the
 National
Defense Strategy
,
released earlier this year, which calls for increased focus on
near-peer competitors. The Trump administration is reportedly poised
to unveil a broader 
strategy
for Africa
 specifically
focused on countering the influence of Russia and China on the
continent.

As
we prioritize where we need to place concentrations of troops, there
were certain specialties — especially in the Special Operations
arena — that we didn’t necessarily need employed in Africa,”
AFRICOM’s Senior Enlisted Leader Chief Master Sergeant
 Ramon
Colon-Lopez
 told
VICE News.

Few,
if any, troops will be cut from hotspots like Libya and Somalia, nor
Djibouti, whose bases also play a pivotal role in U.S. operations in
Yemen and the greater Middle East. Nor will any region of the
continent see all U.S. forces removed. Troop drawdowns in West Africa
will be marked by a shift from tactical-level support to a greater
emphasis on advising, training and intelligence-sharing, the Pentagon
said.

Bolduc,
who supports robust military and diplomatic engagement on the
continent, warned that any significant cuts to special operations
forces would irreparably harm U.S. interests in Africa. 

“We’re
becoming risk averse and it’s slowing down the amount of support we
provide to our partner nations in training, advising, assisting, and
accompanying them,” he said. “We’re basically ceding our
strategic leverage and relationship with our African partners to the
Chinese and the Russians.”

But
Friend said there was greater risk in small teams of special
operators conducting far flung and secretive missions on the
continent.

The
fact that American forces were out in the field like that made them
vulnerable to [ISIS in the Greater Sahara] attacks. If they’re not
forward and not out there, it’s much harder to attack them,” she
said. “So, one of the choices in front of DoD decision-makers is
‘do we want to keep forces forward?’ and therefore ‘what kind
of support do we need to give them?,’” Friend said.


Cover
image: Malian soldiers take part in training at the Kamboinsé
general Bila Zagre military camp near Ouagadougo in Burkina Faso
during a military anti-terrorism exercise with US Army instructors on
April 12, 2018. (ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/Getty Images)

==================================

Zie ook:

VS vermoordt zoals gewoonlijk straffeloos burgers in geheime Somalische oorlog

VS bombardementen: 62 vermoorde stadsbewoners in Somalië

De VS heeft 500 militairen ingezet in Somalië, het imperium breidt zich verder uit……

VS illegaal militair ingrijpen in Niger, ofwel de uitspattingen van een imperium met expansiedrift

VS ‘helden’ helpen Somalische troepen bij het vermoorden van kinderen, één van de specialiteiten van deze helden……….

Jeroen Leenaers (CDA): Somalië is ‘veilig’ voor vluchtelingen………….‘ en in het verlengde daarvan: ‘Jeroen Leenaers (CDA EU): ‘veilige landen’ moeten asielzoekers terugnemen, anders zwaait er wat…….. OEI!!!‘ en: ‘Amnesty International beschuldigt Nederland van het schenden van de mensenrechten, door Somaliërs terug te sturen……

VS, in 2016 vermoordde de VS 24.000 mensen, uit landen die op de lijst van inreisverboden staan…….

VS pleegt aanslag op een leider van al-Shabaab, geen ‘onschuldige slachtoffers…..’

VS contraterrorisme destabiliseert Burkina Faso en Kameroen en brengt vluchtelingenstromen op gang……

Het
noorden van Burkina Faso wordt geteisterd door aanvallen, zoals uiterst
gewelddadige georganiseerde diefstallen…. Sinds 2016 hebben er al 200
van die aanvallen plaatsgevonden, waarbij 263 mensen zijn
omgekomen…….

Een
aantal van de aanvallen is te verklaren daar ze geclaimd zijn door de
‘lokale’ Al Qaida of IS terreurgroepen, ook een groep met de naam Al Mourabitoun is medeverantwoordelijk, voorts heeft Ansar al-Islam*, als Al Mourabitoun een terreurgroep uit Burkina Faso, een aantal aanvallen
geclaimd, echter dit dekt slechts een kleine 10% van alle aanvallen en ‘het is
dan ook de vraag wie die andere aanvallen uitvoert…..’

Wel voor de rest van de terreur (meer dan 90%) is een
door de VS getrainde legergroep verantwoordelijk, een groep die onder en boven de wet staat, het
gaat hier om de voormalige presidentiële garde, door de Fransen
aangeduid als RSP. Eén van de drijfveren voor het geweld is een groot
proces,waar de daders van meerdere coups en gewelddadigheden terecht staan
in een strak afgezet deel van de stad Ouagadougou**, genaamd Ouaga
2000. Onder de terechtstaande figuren bevinden zich beschermelingen van de RSP.

Eén
ding is zeker, de bemoeienis van de VS in haar zogenaamde oorlog
tegen terreur, waarbij de VS zelf NB ongebreidelde terreur inzet, destabiliseert landen, voorbeelden te over. Het steunen van een
legermacht die gebonden is aan een corrupte dictator leidt tot
willekeur en juist veel meer terreur, zoals de VS heeft laten zien in
Afghanistan, Irak, Somalië en Jemen, voorts in landen als
Kameroen waar de VS een snelle reactie macht trainde tegen Boko
Haram, deze snelle reactiemacht is verworden tot een (officiële) legermacht die terreur zaait middels enorme
mensenrechtenschendingen……..***

In
het hieronder opgenomen artikel van The Intercept zegt de
schrijver Joe Penney jammer genoeg niets over wie er profiteert van
de enorme corruptie, hoewel hij corruptie wel noemt. Verantwoordelijk voor die corruptie zijn niet
alleen de oorlogsbazen, maar juist ook grote westerse bedrijven, die
niet graag een eind zien komen aan de corruptie, immers dan zouden ze
het personeel echt moeten betalen en mogen ze niet ongestraft enorme
milieuschade aanrichten………

Nogmaals
een bewijs dat het westen de boel verstiert in Afrika en als er
daardoor vluchtelingen onze kant opkomen, wijst men niet naar deze
smerige bedrijven plus terreurentiteiten als de VS die de corruptie
en geweld in feite in stand houden, maar naar de slachtoffers van die
corrupte en van dat geweld, die de uitzichtloze situatie en het geweld ontvluchten……..

Lees
het volgende artikel van Joe Penney. maar let wel: het is al met al
een behoorlijk ingewikkelde situatie in Burkino Faso en landen
daaromheen:

BLOWBACK
IN AFRICA

How
America’s Counterterror Strategy Helped Destabilize Burkina Faso

Security forces stand in front of the burned exterior of the Splendid Hotel after an Al Qaeda attack that killed 30 people there and in a restaurant across the street in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, January 16, 2016. Joe Penney

Joe
Penney

November
22 2018, 1:00 p.m.

ON
A MUGGY EVENING
 in mid-August, a convoy
of gold miners and gendarmes in 4x4s and pickup trucks drove on an
unpaved road from a Canadian-owned gold mine in Boungou, eastern
Burkina Faso. Just a few miles after leaving the facility, the convoy
hit a mine. Gunmen jumped out from the thick forest on the side of
the road and opened fire, killing five gendarmes and one miner.

Two
months later, in the northern town of Inata near the Malian border —
another gold-mining site — a column of militants on motorcycles
ambushed police in the early hours of the morning, killing one
gendarme and carrying away police equipment as they fled the scene.
The Burkinabé military authorities called in the help of French
troops stationed in neighboring Niger, and they sent two Mirage
fighter jets 
that
struck the fleeing militants
.
This opened up yet another front for France’s overstretched
military operation in the Sahel region, cementing the perception that
six years after the French intervention in Mali, security in the
region is deteriorating.

Since
January 2016, more than 200 militant attacks have killed at least 263
people in Burkina Faso, according to data from Héni Nsaibia, a
researcher at the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED).
The violence “has created a kind of psychosis in terms of security,
especially in the north,” said Bénéwendé Sankara, vice president
of parliament. “So far, the consequences are terrible. Schools and
health clinics are closed, people have fled. It’s become a no-man’s
land.” The incidents in Boungou and Inata are emblematic — both
in the nature of the attacks and the unknown identity of the
attackers — of the destabilization of the Burkinabé state.

These
attacks are enveloped in a huge mystery — just who is committing
them, and why?

A
few of the major attacks have been claimed by regional jihadi groups
like Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, Islamic State in the Greater
Sahara, and Al Mourabitoun. Ansar Al Islam, a group founded by
the late Burkinabé radical preacher Malam Ibrahim Dicko, has claimed
others. But more than 90 percent of the attacks have not been claimed
— including the assaults on Boungou and Inata — and the
assailants are unknown, at least to the public. “Behind terrorist
attacks, there is always a political and religious motivation,”
Police Commissioner Anihifahata Yacoub Sié Rachid Palenfo told me
when I recently visited the 
country.
“In the case of Burkina Faso, we did not feel a religious
motivation. What, then, is the message?”

In this photo taken on Saturday, Sept. 19, 2015, Gen. Gilbert Diendere, left, who was named leader of Burkina Faso on Thursday, speaks to media in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. West African mediators late Saturday hinted at a breakthrough in Burkina Faso's political crisis after a military coup brought a general to power less than a month before scheduled elections. (AP Photo/Theo Renaut)

Gen.
Gilbert Diendéré, left, speaks to media in Ouagadougou, Burkina
Faso, on Sept. 19, 2015.

Photo:
Theo Renaut/AP

WHAT’S
HAPPENING IN
 Burkina Faso appears to be, at
least in part, an example of blowback against U.S. anti-terror
tactics. That’s because a now-disbanded elite military unit that
received training from the U.S. is suspected of being involved in the
attacks against the country.

There
are multiple theories behind the swift breakdown in security — and
all turn around the 2014 revolution that overthrew ex-dictator Blaise
Compaoré and threatened his feared presidential guard, known by its
French acronym RSP and led by Gen. Gilbert Diendéré. By toppling
only the president, which led to the disbanding of his key military
unit a year later, the revolution left the country with a gaping
security hole. As a special unit of roughly 1,300 soldiers with
separate living quarters, equipment, training, and pay from the
regular army, the presidential guard protected the interests of the
party in power, rather than the country at large. The RSP was
particularly potent, too — it had its own counterterrorism unit
that received training from both France and the U.S.

The
insecurity that Burkina Faso is experiencing today appears to be
proof that support for an elite unit that works for a corrupt
dictator can lead to more terrorism and insecurity. This type of
mistake is one of the hallmarks of the so-called war on terror and
has been repeated, in various forms, in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia,
Yemen, and numerous other countries. In Cameroon, for example, the
Rapid Intervention Brigade, an elite unit that the U.S. has worked
with to fight Boko Haram in the north of the country, has been
accused of numerous human rights violations while fighting
Anglophone separatist groups in western Cameroon.

Security forces stand guard after an Al Qaeda attack that killed 30 people in a restaurant and hotel in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, January 16, 2016. Joe Penney

Security
forces stand guard on Jan. 16, 2016, after an Al Qaeda attack killed
30 people in a restaurant and hotel in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.
Photo:
Joe Penney for The Intercept

Although
the first truly democratically elected government in Burkina Faso’s
history took the reins in January 2016, “the existence of the state
is still uncertain,” said Méleguem Traoré, a former head of
parliament and close confidant of Compaoré, the former president. In
March, 
a
double attack
 hit
the army headquarters and French embassy in the heart of the capital,
Ouagadougou, killing 16. After gunmen from Al Qaeda in the Islamic
Maghreb targeted two restaurants on one of the capital’s busiest
streets, businesses have set up airport-style security at
establishments throughout the city. In Ouagadougou’s main square,
Place de la Nation — where protesters massed to demand the fall of
Compaoré in 2014 and again when Diendéré’s men carried out their
own coup attempt in 2015 to return to power — jumpy soldiers now
monitor all passersby.

Strangely,
the key to ending the mysterious terror attacks may not lie in remote
battlefields, but in a public spectacle that takes place every
weekday in the north of Ouagadougou.

A garbage collected rids his donkey-led carriage on a street closed for the trial against former General Gilbert Diend?r? and the coup plotters of 2015 in the Ouaga 2000 neighborhood of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, August 28, 2018. Joe Penney for The Intercept

A
garbage collector rides his donkey-led carriage on a street closed
for the trial against former Gen. Gilbert Diendéré and the coup
plotters of 2015 in the Ouaga 2000 neighborhood of Ouagadougou,
Burkina Faso, on Aug. 28, 2018.Photo:
Joe Penney for The Intercep
t

IT
HAPPENS AT 
10 a.m. in the upscale Ouaga
2000 neighborhood — traffic is shut down on a main throughway
housing embassies and a major hotel. It is in this neighborhood, at a
convention center, that Diendéré, the former head of the
presidential guard, and former Foreign Minister Djibril Bassolé, as
well as 82 others, are standing trial for their roles in a 2015 coup
d’état that sought to overthrow the fledgling transitional
government in favor of Compaoré’s allies. Former RSP soldiers,
some wearing the uniforms of the regular army and some wearing
civilian clothes, respond one by one to questioning by military
judges and prosecution lawyers. Diendéré — who is locked in a
maximum-security military prison and charged with treason, attacking
state security, and the beating and murder of protesters — is due
to stand for questioning soon.

Few
would have dreamed it was possible for someone so feared and powerful
as Diendéré to face such serious criminal charges, making the trial
an unprecedented push toward justice and accountability. Dozens of
journalists attend the proceedings, passing through the tight
security checkpoints to enter every morning and write full accounts
of the day’s proceedings in almost all of the country’s
newspapers.

Prior
to their political demise, Diendéré, Bassolé, and the Mauritanian
consultant they worked with, Moustapha Limam Chafi, were key U.S.
allies in Francophone West Africa. Burkina Faso, which means
“Land of the Upright People,” had never experienced a terrorist
attack. For instance, in 2012, Compaoré, then president, sent
Diendéré on a mission north of Timbuktu, Mali, to procure the
release of Swiss hostage Beatrice Stockly, who had been kidnapped
just nine days earlier by Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb. Over soft
drinks and grilled lamb with one of the most wanted Al Qaeda leaders,
Diendéré ensured the handover of millions of dollars in return for
the Swiss missionary.

Compaoré
— who had come to power in a coup that killed the revolutionary
leader Thomas Sankara in 1987, instilling stability through
authoritarian rule — had played a key role in negotiating the
release of multiple Western hostages in the region. There was a cost
to this, however. Known as
the 
pompier-pyromane (“firefighter-pyromaniac”),
his efforts to negotiate peace deals with neighbors (like the talks
between Tuareg rebels and the Malian government in Ouagadougou in
2012) were buffeted by reports that he had played a more nefarious
role in numerous conflicts, including arming rebels in Ivory Coast
and trading weapons for diamonds to former President Charles Taylor
in Liberia.

Anti-government protesters gather in the Place de la Nation in Ouagadougou, capital of Burkina Faso, October 31, 2014. General Honore Traore, the head of Burkina Faso's armed forces, took power on Friday after President Blaise Compaore resigned amid mass demonstrations against an attempt to extend his 27-year rule in the West African country. REUTERS/Joe Penney (BURKINA FASO - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY) - GM1EAAV1SCI01
Anti-government protesters take over the parliament building in Ouagadougou, capital of Burkina Faso, October 30, 2014. Thousands of protesters marched on Burkina Faso's presidential palace after burning the parliament building and ransacking state television offices on Thursday, forcing President Blaise Compaore to scrap a plan to extend his 27-year rule. Emergency services said at least three protesters were shot dead and several others wounded by security forces when the crowd tried to storm the home of Compaore's brother. Security forces also fired live rounds and tear gas at protesters near the presidency in the Ouaga 2000 neighborhood. REUTERS/Joe Penney (BURKINA FASO - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY) - RTR4C6YT

Top:
Anti-government protesters gather in the Place de la Nation in
Ouagadougou on Oct. 31, 2014. Bottom: Anti-government
protesters take over the parliament building in Ouagadougou on Oct.
30, 2014.
Photos: Joe Penney/Reuters

In
2014, a popular uprising of millions of protesters fed up with
the 
pompier-pyromane took
to the streets and chased him from power. Compaoré fled on a French
helicopter to neighboring Ivory Coast and is still there. One of the
transitional government’s most ambitious acts was to try to
completely dissolve the RSP. But in 2015, before the transitional
government got a chance to carry out its plan, Diendéré and the RSP
staged a coup against the transitional government. Diendéré’s
forces were defeated by the regular army and street protests. The RSP
was completely dissolved immediately after the civilian government
was restored to power.

But
this created a dangerous vacuum.

The
intelligence system that we had was based on structures at the
gendarmerie and at the presidential security unit,” said Traoré,
the confidant of the ousted president. “Those structures were
brutally broken up, and the man at the center of all that, Gen.
Gilbert Diendéré, was taken out of play,” he added.

Under
Compaoré, Tuareg rebel groups who had allied with Al Qaeda were able
to come in and out of Burkina while the country hosted peace talks
between them and the Malian government, giving way to rumors that
Compaoré had a tacit agreement to allow their presence in exchange
for no attacks. The new government made a conscious decision to cut
off their access to the country. “They could have kept up the
contacts, but I think the political choice was to break with these
groups and to ask those who were in Burkina to leave,” said
Sankara, the parliament vice president. “And I think it’s the
result of this decision that it was necessary to hit Burkina.”

Vice President of the parliament Bénéwende Sankara poses for a picture in his office at the new parliament building in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, August 28, 2018. Joe Penney for The Intercept

The
vice president of the parliament, Bénéwende Sankara, at his office
at the new parliament building in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, on Aug.
28, 2018.

Photo:
Joe Penney for The Intercept

Some
in Burkina believe that the RSP and the former regime are at least
partially the cause of the country’s growing instability. “There
is a common interest between the terrorist groups that operate in
West Africa and the Burkinabé political camp that is no longer in
power,” said Guy Hervé Kam, co-founder of the Balai Citoyen, one
of the main groups that organized protests against Compaoré, and one
of the prosecution’s lawyers in the trial against Diendéré and
his co-conspirators. The police commissioner, Anihifahata 
Yacoub
Sié Rachid Palenfo, said that while RSP deserters may be
participating in the attacks today, there is no proof of this,
although he noted that a number of RSP dismissed for mutiny in 2011
had been proven to be committing crimes and attacks shortly after
their dismissal.

The
researcher Héni Nsaibia argued that “pointing fingers at Diendéré,
Bassolé, ex-RSP, and former President Blaise Compaoré has been very
convenient for the current regime.” Nsaibia believes a large
portion of the attacks are carried out by Ansar Al Islam
militants but also the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, both of
whom are not claiming responsibility because “none of the groups
have created any media wings,” as well as “strategic
considerations to survive long-term by avoiding unwanted
attention, including military action and ISR/ESM measures by
international forces, the latter creating difficulties for the
militants in communicating with each other regularly from greater
distances.”

Providing
some support to Nsaibia’s thesis, a spokesperson for the French
military said that in addition to the airstrike on fleeing militants
in Inata, whom the French suspect to be from the Ansar Al Islam,
French soldiers have also supported Burkinabé patrols in the east of
the country to stop “armed groups that carry out predatory attacks
and actions against the security forces.”

Burkina Faso's former prime minister Luc Adolphe Tiao waits for the opening of the trial of the former president and members of his last government on April 27, 2017 at the High Court of Justice in Ouagadougou. Ousted Burkina Faso president Blaise Compaore and several former ministers are on trial over the violent crackdown on the October 2014 popular uprising that overthrew him. The trial has been postponed until May 4. / AFP PHOTO / Ahmed OUOBA        (Photo credit should read AHMED OUOBA/AFP/Getty Images)

Burkina
Faso’s former prime minister, Luc Adolphe Tiao, far right, waits
for the opening of the trial of the former president and members of
his last government on April 27, 2017 in Ouagadougou. Photo:
Ahmed
Ouoba/AFP/Getty
Images

damning
Human Rights Watch report
 stated
that the Burkinabé military’s heavy-handed response to jihadi
militants often aggravated the problems. According to the report,
“Burkinabé security forces have conducted counterterrorism
operations in 2017 and 2018 that resulted in numerous allegations of
extrajudicial killings, abuse of suspects in custody, and arbitrary
arrests,” and a significant portion of the abuses were against the
Peul ethnic group. The security forces’ wanton violence has led to
more lawlessness and local residents are less likely to cooperate
with them against the jihadi groups, the report noted.

Diendéré’s
lawyer, Mathieu Somé, said that his client is innocent on all
charges he is facing (Diendéré is also on trial for his alleged
role in the murder of Thomas Sankara, as well as for the killing of
protesters in the 2014 revolution), and that the trial is a waste of
time. “When you don’t know how to run a country, you’ll always
blame it on someone else,” he said. “Why continue to divide the
country with a nonsensical affair?”

Kam,
however, told me that the prosecution has audio recordings of RSP and
former regime members plotting in French and Arabic with Malian
militants to attack the country. The attacks echo an 
audio
recording
released
in 2015 purporting to show the president of neighboring Ivory Coast’s
parliament, Guillaume Soro, floating a strategy to destabilize the
Burkinabé armed forces in the wake of Diendéré’s failed coup of
2015. “You hit a city in the north; we take a police station or a
gendarmerie. They’re going to flee, they can’t resist,” Soro
says in a phone conversation with Djibril Bassolé, who replies “Yes,
OK.” Soro is a former rebel 
who
received arms from Compaoré and Diendéré
 when
his New Forces soldiers were fighting then-Ivorian President Laurent
Gbagbo, and is close to the former Burkinabé regime.

These
are uneasy times in Burkina. Kam is worried for his own security and
thinks that there will be more serious attacks to threaten the
stability of the country as the trial draws closer to its end. There
have already been three prison breaks to free Diendéré that he
knows of. “The atmosphere of fear is not that they will come back
to power, it’s that they are like wounded beasts capable of lashing
out if they have the opportunity,” Kam said. “Take an officer in
the box of the accused who has been in power his whole life. He knows
that if the trial ends, he will do 20 years in prison and will lose
everything. What does he lose by trying to cause trouble?”

A vendor sells fruits and vegetables at dusk in the Ouaga 2000 neighborhood where former General Gilbert Diend?r? and the coup plotters of 2015 are on trial in Ouagadougouof Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, August 28, 2018. Joe Penney for The Intercept

A
vendor sells fruits and vegetables at dusk in the Ouaga 2000
neighborhood where former Gen. Gilbert Diendéré and the coup
plotters of 2015 are on trial in Ouagadougon Aug. 28, 2018. Photo:
Joe Penney for The Intercept

THE
HOPE FOR
 a new kind of democracy that swept
the nation after the dictator fell has given way to fear and
apprehension. With Burkina Faso’s security falling apart, the U.S.
response seems to be more of the same. The U.S. military is once
again working with counterterrorism units in the country. “We are
helping Burkina Faso build counterterrorism units to counter violent
extremist organizations (VEOs) based out of Mali, and we assist
terrorism response forces in Ouagadougou,” said U.S. Africa Command
spokesperson Becky Farmer.

The
Burkina government vows to continue with the trial against Diendéré
and its regular army missions against the militants. Parliament
recently passed laws raising its meager security budget, but it’s
not clear if that will be enough. Unlike neighbors Mali and Niger,
there is relatively little foreign military presence in Burkina,
though that may change soon. “It’s a kind of pressure cooker,
it’s bubbling, and we must find the remedy, otherwise all the
ingredients are there for it to explode,” said Sankara, the vice
president of parliament. “We are fighting them. We pay the price,
every day there are deaths, but I believe that we must succeed in
eradicating them.”

Additional
reporting by Nadoun Coulibaly and Claude Romba.

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depend on the support of readers like you to help keep our nonprofit
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Join Us 

U.S.
SPECIAL OPERATIONS NUMBERS SURGE IN AFRICA’S SHADOW WARS

**EMBARGO: No electronic distribution, Web posting or street sales before Sunday 3:00 a.m. ET April 22, 2018. No exceptions for any reasons. EMBARGO set by source.** Air Force engineers and members of 31st Expeditionary RED HORSE squadron work on a landing strip, on the Air Base 201 compound, in Agadez, Niger, April 12, 2018. Hundreds of American troops are working feverishly to convert a barren swath of scrubland here into the Pentagon's newest and potentially deadliest drone base on the African continent, in a sign of the region's widening terrorist threats. (Tara Todras-Whitehill/The New York Times)

THE
U.S. IS BUILDING A DRONE BASE IN NIGER THAT WILL COST MORE THAN $280 

===========================================

* Niet te verwarren met Ansar al-Islam, een Koerdisch-islam groep, overigens fanatieke aanhangers van de sharia.

** Ouagadougou >> ook Ouaga genoemd.

*** Zie:

CAMEROON IS A CLOSE U.S. ALLY — AND ITS SOLDIERS CARRIED OUT A SHOCKING EXECUTION OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN

Nigeria hongersnood: de wereld kijkt de andere kant op…….. Lees en teken a.u.b. de petitie gericht aan de VN!

Afgelopen woensdag ontving ik de volgende petitie van Care2. De petitie is gericht aan de VN, met de eis eindelijk aandacht te besteden aan de vreselijke situatie die in Noordoost-Nigeria is ontstaan. Door de terreur van Boko Haram (en het Nigeriaanse leger, die bij tijd en wijle ook tekeergaat tegen de bevolking), zijn miljoenen mensen op de vlucht geslagen……..

Gevolg van die vlucht: er wordt niet meer geoogst en er is al een hongersnood gaande, die nu al aan 120.000 mensen (inclusief veel kinderen) het leven dreigt te kosten…… Lees en teken de petitie a.u.b. en geef het door aan familie, vrienden en bekenden.

Hier de tekst van Care2, u kan in de tekst vier keer klikken op een blauwe positie, waarna u de petitie te zien krijgt (en deze kan tekenen):

120,000
people are likely to die of starvation within the next year
 in
northeastern Nigeria, according to the United Nations. Most of these
victims are children.

Despite
this harrowing reality, the international community has overlooked
the crisis, along with our chance at addressing the issue and saving
lives.


That
ends now.


The
plight of the Nigerian people is beyond heartbreaking and
unimaginable to most of us. But there is a way to change things
around. 
It
starts with the United Nations declaring the tragic situation in
Nigeria a Level 3 Emergency.

The
militant group Boko Haram has wrecked havoc on the country with
bombings, assassinations and abductions. Millions of people have been
displaced, and farmland and roads are inaccessible. As a result,
hundreds of thousands are dying of starvation. Children are so thin
that the skull is often the only place where aid workers can find a
vein to deliver much-needed fluids.

A
Guardian correspondent 
reported having
witnessed skeletal babies and children receiving fluids into their
skulls. The children were so thin that often the skull was the only
place a vein could be found – and this horrific sight was witnessed
in Maiduguri, one of the best-served places in the region.
Kevin
Watkins, chief executive of Save the Children, said that despite the
horrific conditions, “
The
international community hasn’t responded on any scale at all
.”
Orla Fagan, a Nigeria-based spokesperson for the United Nations,
said, “
It’s
the biggest crisis on the continent and it’s being ignored
.

We
can no longer turn a blind eye.


By
classifying the situation in Nigeria as the highest degree of crisis,
it would attract international attention that could lead to more
international aid. Lives depend on it.

Please
take notice of those suffering and starving in Nigeria and 
sign
the petition today.
 The
United Nations needs to hear from citizens around the world so that
they’re pressured into increasing the emergency level and attention
on this crisis.

Voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, klik op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terug kan vinden.

Nigeriaanse leger speelt dubieuze rol bij bestrijding Boko Haram en moordt er lustig op los……

Vorige week donderdag plaatste ik al een bericht over de Nigeriaanse president Buhari, die durfde te stellen, dat Boko Haram, zo goed als verslagen was*. ICH (Information Clearing Huis), bracht afgelopen zaterdag het bericht, dat het Nigeriaanse leger een heel smerige rol speelt, wat betreft Boko Haram…… Zo beging het leger maar liefst duizend moorden tijdens een anti-regerings demonstratie….. Vandaar waarschijnlijk ook het mediaoptreden van president Buhari, die bij BBC vertelde, dat hij zo goed bezig is, tegen Boko Haram….* Hier het bericht op ICH van Glen Ford, u kan desgewenst onder het artikel voor een vertaling klikken, dat neemt wel enige tijd in beslag:

Nigerian
Military: “The Real Boko Haram”

By
Glen Ford

The
Nigerian military has long been suspected of manipulating Boko Haram
to its own ends.”

December
24, 2015 “
Information
Clearing House

– “
BAR
–  Hammad Ibrahim, a soft-spoken, intelligent young man,
accompanied his father, Sheikh Ibrahim Zakzaky, the leader of
Nigeria’s Shia Muslims, to a conference on 
Solidarity
with Palestine
,
in Beirut, last week. I was there, along with other reporters and
activists. Young Hammad told our group that Boko Haram, the Nigerian
jihadists, are terrorist thugs who get their weapons and money from
both Nigerian and foreign donors, just like the Islamic State, with
which Boko Haram is aligned. Hammad’s father, Sheikh Zakzaky, is
recognized as a force for reconciliation among the various religious
and ethnic groups in Nigeria. But Zakzaky’s Shia followers have
been targeted by both Boko Haram and the Nigerian military, which has
long been suspected of manipulating Boko Haram to its own ends. The
Nigerian army killed three of the Sheikh’s sons in 2009 during a
march against the Israeli occupation of Jerusalem.

By
this weekend, Hammad was also dead, killed by the Nigerian military
shortly after he arrived back in the country in a massacre
of unarmed Shia Muslims that left his father with bullet wounds in
both hands. The military claims the Sheikh’s followers were
plotting to kill the army chief of staff when his motorcade was
blocked by demonstrators. But, it was pure murder on a massive scale,
with as many as 
1,000
dead
 and
two hundred bodies piled up at a morgue on the outskirts of town. The
military then bulldozed a Shia shrine and Sheikh Zakzaky’s home.
One of the Sheikh’s followers, Bukhari Muhammed Bello Jega, wrote
on his Facebook page that “the REAL BOKO HARAM is now on the loose”
in form of the Nigerian army, “bombing buildings and killing
innocent civilians.” Soon after posting that message, Mr. Bello
Jega was also killed by soldiers, along with his 
wife
and infant child
.

It
was pure murder on a massive scale, with as many as 1,000 dead.”

It
is not strange at all that the Nigerian military, which for years did
little to halt the rise of Boko Haram terror, has unleashed a hell on
earth for peaceful Shia Muslims. Saudi Arabia, the fountainhead of
funding for jihadists all over the world, has just formed its
own 
bizarre
coalition against terror
,
made up of 34 nations from Pakistan to sub-Saharan Africa, including
Nigeria and its West African neighbors Chad, Togo, Senegal, Sierra
Leone, Gabon, Guinea, and the Ivory Coast. For the Saudis to be
leading a war against terror is like the Pope leading a war against
Catholicism. Everything the Saudis touch turns into terror and chaos.
The Saudi brand of Wahhabist Islam calls for the eradication of Shia
Muslims and secular governments, worldwide – a crusade that the
United States finds convenient to its own imperial purposes. When
both Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton say that Arabs and Muslims
must fight their own war against terror, they are actually endorsing
Saudi Arabia’s leadership of the Muslim world and the spread of
proxy jihadist armies throughout Africa and Asia.

West
Africa is the next front in these jihadist wars, which have already
claimed so many of Sheikh Zakzaky’s sons. The resulting chaos will
be used to justify further U.S military penetration of the African
continent, under the pretext of putting out the fires that they
themselves have set.

For
Black Agenda Radio, I’m Glen Ford. On the web, go to
BlackAgendaReport.com.

BAR
executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted 
at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com.

Click
for
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* Zie: ‘Buhari (Nigeriaanse president): Boko Haram is zo goed als verslagen……… ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

BBC World Service meldde in het radionieuws van 13.00 u., dat Boko Haram vandaag een Nigeriaans dorp heeft aangevallen en daar minstens 15 mensen heeft vermoord…….

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het voorgaande, op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terugvindt. Dit geldt niet voor de labels Glen Ford en Zakzaky.

Buhari (Nigeriaanse president): Boko Haram is zo goed als verslagen……… ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

In het nieuws van BBC World Service (1.00 u. onze tijd) het bericht, dat de Nigeriaanse president Muhammadu Buhari in een BBC interview heeft gesteld, dat Boko Haram zo goed als verslagen is……. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! Even ‘ter illustratie’: de laatste twee maanden heeft Boko Haram 1.000 Nigerianen vermoord bij meer dan 100 aanslagen, die het Nigeriaanse leger en/of de politie niet wisten te voorkomen…….. 

Buhari verwart (expres) het feit, dat Boko Haram het leger van Nigeria niet meer aanvalt, iets dat deze laffe honden toch al minimaal deden……

Buhari beloofde voor de verkiezingen en bij zijn installering als president, dat hij Boko Haram snel zou verslaan, vandaar……. Het is als met de oude president Goodluck Jonathan, die van alles beloofde, maar in feite weinig of niets zinnigs ondernam tegen deze moorddadige, laffe terroristen……

Zie ook: ‘Bob Steetskamp: ‘er liggen veel kansen voor Nederlandse ondernemers in Nigeria……’

        en: ‘Nigeria: Goodluck Jonathan blij met ontvoering meisjes…….

       en: ‘Hammelburg: ‘je kan het eigenlijk geen omkoping noemen, dus kom gerust zaken doen, kansen te over!!!’

Klik voor meer berichten, n.a.v. het voorgaande, op één van de volgende labels, die u onder dit bericht terugvindt. Dit geldt (nog) niet voor het label Buhari. 

Koenders en Mali: Nederland heeft er nog net geen crisiscentrum………

Na de algehele hysterie en media sensatie, rond de aanslagen in Parijs, kwam gisteren het bericht, dat Boko Haram in de hoofdstad van Mali, Bamako, 170 hotelgasten had gegijzeld. Uiteraard werd er onmiddellijk gemeld, dat er voor zover bekend, zich geen Nederlanders bevonden onder de gegijzelden….. Want kijk, als er Nederlanders bij betrokken waren, was de reguliere programmering door de NOS op zeker onderbroken, men heeft de smaak daar nog te pakken………. Zo zond de NOS vorige week 1 lange sensatie uitzending uit over de aanslagen en besteedde de dagen daarna ongelofelijk veel aandacht aan die aanslagen. Uiteraard door o.a. zo vaak mogelijk de geluiden van ontploffingen en schoten te laten horen, ‘want dat willen de mensen graag horen, nietwaar??!!! Voorts met zoveel mogelijk zichzelf belangrijk vindende flapdrollen, die aangekondigd als ‘deskundigen’, oeverloos ‘op’ de radio mochten zwetsten……… Sterker nog: daar is tot op de dag van vandaag geen verandering in gekomen……

De potsierlijke PvdA jaknik kwast Koenders vond het gistermiddag nodig nog wat ‘gewichtige’ woorden te laten horen over de gijzeling in Bamako, woorden die het Radio1 nieuws van 16.00 u. ten gehore bracht. Koenders herhaalde het nieuws en bevestigde, dat er i.d.d. nog niet bekend was, of er zich Nederlanders onder de slachtoffers, dan wel (ex-) gegijzelden bevonden……. Heel gewichtig vertelde hij, dat er al contact was gelegd met de ambassade (daar heeft BuZa nog een mannetje met fiets en draadhaspel voor…). Het viel me nog mee, dat er nog geen Nederlands crisiscentrum was ingericht in Mali……………. 

Het is weer eens duidelijk gemaakt: de leden van het kabinet laten het volk, het liefst zo vaak mogelijk weten, hoe ‘voortvarend’ men ‘wel niet’ is en zo met misbruik van bijvoorbeeld aanslagen en daarmee over de rug van slachtoffers, het eigen imago op te poetsen……… U snapt dat deze figuren een uitzonderlijk hoge dunk hebben van het eigen functioneren, ook al is daar zoals telkens weer blijkt, totaal geen reden toe!! 

Het is dat ‘t godvurredomme allemaal weer zo triest is, anders………..

Nog een toevoeging na plaatsing: Koenders vertelde dat hij het Radisson Blu Hotel in Bamako goed kent; dit hotel is het duurste hotel in Mali….. Alsof we niet weten, dat het kabinet vooral goed is, in het op grote schaal verspillen van belastinggeld!!

Voor meer berichten over Mali, Boko Haram, aanslagen P, terreur, religieus radicalisme, jihadstrijders, militaire missie (ja, ook daar is ons leger actief, dit vanwege de enorme fout die het westen in Libië maakte, met het bombarderen van Khadaffi en zijn troepen en uiteraard een fiks deel van de totale infrastructuur…), gijzeling en/of Koenders, klik op het desbetreffende label, onder dit bericht.

Chirurgie: 2 miljard mensen hebben geen toegang tot betaalbare, of zelfs maar aanwezige chrirugie, dit kost jaarlijks 1,5 miljoen mensen het leven……..

Gistermorgen op BBC World Service (radio), in het nieuwsbericht van 11.00 u., de mededeling dat het ontbreken van (zelfs simpele) chirurgie, zo’n 1,5 miljoen mensen jaarlijks het leven kost. Volgens onderzoekers hebben wereldwijd 2 miljard mensen geen toegang tot chirurgische hulp, waardoor zelfs een blindedarmontsteking (te verhelpen met een simpele chirurgische ingreep), in de meeste gevallen dodelijk is………. Die 1,5 miljoen dodelijke slachtoffers is ongelofelijk veel meer, dan het totaal aantal doden ten gevolge van aids en malaria bij elkaar………..

Wanneer gaan we eens echt iets doen aan de ellende in de wereld, stoppen met wapenverkopen en zinloos militair ingrijpen, dat maar al te vaak, tot veel grotere ellende leidt……

We moeten ons doodschamen, dat we op deze kleine planeet, in het onmetelijke grote multiversum, zo met onze medemensen omgaan en dan vindt men het godverdomme gek, dat mensen uit ontwikkelingslanden, deze kant op vluchten…….. Als u jonge kinderen had en u zou weten, dat één of meer van hen, voor hun 15de levensjaar het leven zouden laten, of de oorzaak nu medisch is, dan wel door oorlogsvoering, dan zou u toch zeker ook kiezen voor een vlucht naar het westen????!!! Of zou u uw kinderen laten creperen??

Vergeet daarnaast niet, dat (grote) westerse bedrijven zorgen, dat corrupte regeringsleiders in het zadel komen en daar kunnen blijven zitten, waarna er zoals gezegd ook nog eens kapitalen worden verdiend met wapenverkopen…… Wapens die deze landen kunnen missen als kiespijn en alleen maar zorgen voor nog grotere ellende. Nu denkt u waarschijnlijk: “En groepen als Boko Haram en IS dan?” Welnu, deze groepen hebben hun groei 1 op 1 te danken, aan ons gore handelen en ingrijpen…..

Nigeria, Hammelburg: ‘je kan het eigenlijk geen omkoping noemen, dus kom gerust zaken doen, kansen te over!!!’

Viel gistermorgen ‘pardoes’ in een gesprek van BNR volvette oliebol Hammelburg en een andere ‘deskundige’ over Nigeria en de verkiezingen* daar (neem ik aan). De corruptie is volgens Hammelburg geen corruptie of omkoperij, je koopt gewoon diensten, zo moet je dat zien…. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! Veel over Shell, die groot zou zijn in Nigeria, aldus Hammelburg, terwijl ik me meen te herinneren, dat Shell veel van z’n activiteiten heeft afgestoten en nog gaat afstoten in Nigeria. De bedoeling is dat Shell binnen afzienbare tijd weg is uit dit land, uiteraard zonder de troep, nou zeg maar giga vervuiling, die dit bedrijf in de Nigerdelta heeft veroorzaakt, op te ruimen…….. Hammelburg noemde wel de klacht van Shell, dat er veel olie zou zijn gestolen en dat dit voor de gigantische vervuiling heeft gezorgd. Een vervuiling waardoor hele gemeenschappen geen bron van inkomsten meer hebben. Uiteraard werd er niet geluld over de deplorabele staat van de pijpleidingen, die Shell gebruikt in de Nigerdelta, waardoor vele lekken zijn ontstaan en het overgrote deel van de olievervuiling is veroorzaakt…….

Vandaar dat Hammelburg niets over corruptie in dat land wil weten, want daar heeft Shell decennia lang gebruik van gemaakt en heeft het zo ongelofelijk slecht gezorgd voor de pijpleidingen….. Inspecties zijn tenslotte maar diensten, die afgekocht kunnen worden!! Daarnaast heeft Shell een fiks deel van de politiek in de zak en dat al jaren…… Door die corruptie is het land arm, maar de (ex-) machthebbers schathemelrijk, een land dat zoveel olie heeft, maar waar de stroomvoorziening ongelofelijk slecht is, het aantal keren dat de stroom per dag uitvalt, is al bijna niet te tellen…..

Hammelburg had nog wel een boodschaop voor de Nederlandse ondernemers: ga naar Nigeria, de mogelijkheden om daar bakken geld te verdienen liggen letterlijk op straat en ach, je stopt hier en daar wat mensen geld toe en alles wordt geregeld zoals jij dat wilt…… Arbeiders uitbuiten is daar geen vies woord en van luchtvervuiling heeft men nog nooit gehoord…. Al vertelde de BNR oliebol van krentenkoek dat er niet bij…….

Overigens stemt de Nederlandse overheid haar beleid t.a.v. Shell en Nigeria, nauwkeurig en voornamelijk af met Shell, zo kreeg NU.nl via wobben boven tafel……. 

* De extreem corrupte president van Nigeria, Goodluck Jonathan beloofde eerder deze maand, dat Boko Haram, een uiterst gewelddadige terreurgroep, voor het eind van deze maand zou zijn opgeruimd……. ha! ha! ha! ha!

Zie ook: ‘Brunel uit Nigeria, neokoloniaal uitgelegd door Joop van der Vinne………‘ 

Voor meer berichten over Nigeria, klik op het betreffende label, onder dit bericht.

Roelof Hemmen kan best grinniken om Boko Haram……..

De lullende lachzak van BNR, Roelof Hemmen, sprak gistermiddag in het nieuwsoverzicht voor 13.00 u., met een collega, die het ‘laatste belangrijke nieuws’ oplepelde. De man sprak over Boko Haram, dat een heel dorp heeft weggevaagd in Nigeria en de niet gevluchte burgers een vreselijke dood heeft bezorgd. Geen reden voor BNR’s volvette lachzak Roelof Hemmen, even geen gegrinnik te laten horen, terwijl zijn collega over dit nieuws sprak……….

Voor meer berichten over deze volvette BNR lachzak, klik op zijn naam, onder dit bericht

Timmermans: nadat zo ongeveer de hele wereld Nigeria hulp toezegde bij het veiligstellen, van de meer dan 200, door Boko Haram, ontvoerde meisjes, heeft ook PvdA spuit 11 Timmermans deze toezegging gedaan………..