Post on 21-Dec-2014
description
The Democratic Republic of the
Congo Policy Frameworks: From Conflict Minerals and
Resources to Fair Trade and Sustainable Minerals
Thesis Argument
Sustainable democracy in Africa, specifically in the Congo, can not be established until the Congolese people become unified under stable government, take precedence over their resources, and launch an international governance board to oversee development of the Congo state.
Favorite Quote
“From the colonial era, the major legacy Europe left for Africa was not democracy as it is practiced today in countries like England, France and Belgium; it was authoritarian rule and plunder. On the whole continent, perhaps no nation has had a harder time than the Congo in emerging from the shadow of its past.”
- King Leopold’s Ghost, Adam Hochschild
Key Terms of the Failed Congo State
• Imperialism
• Raubwirtschaft: German for “plunder economy”
• Kleptocracy
• Exploitation
Scramble for Africa
• European surplus capital was often more profitably invested overseas, where cheap labor, limited competition, and abundant raw materials made greater premiums possible
• Another inducement to imperialism arose from the demand for raw materials unavailable in Europe, such as copper, cotton, rubber, palm oil, cocoa, diamonds, tea, and tin
King Leopold II
King Leopold II ruled the Congo from 1885-1908 as his personal fiefdom and business venture
Forced labor, enslavement and mutilation of the native population was common
The Encyclopedia Britannica estimates the population loss at somewhere between 8 million and 30 million people.
Belgian Congo
“The elimination of the more brutal aspects of the Congo Free State notwithstanding, Belgian rule remained conspicuously unreceptive to political reform. By placing the inculcation of Western moral principles above political education and welfare benefits above the apprenticeship of social responsibility, Belgian policies virtually ruled out all initiatives designed to foster political experience and responsibility among Africans.”
-Encyclopedia Britannica
Mobutu Sese Seko
• Formed a totalitarian regime in Zaire
• Killed and tortured political rivals
In 1968 Pierre Mulele, Lumumba's Minister of Education, while alive, had his eyes were gouged out, his genitals ripped off, and his limbs amputated one by one
• Amassed a vast personal fortune, $4 billion, at the expense of Zaire
So What? Why Should I Care?
In January 2008 the International Rescue Committee (IRC) estimated that 5.4 million people had died due to violence, starvation, and disease since the beginning of the civil war in 1998. 45,000 additional Congolese deaths occur each month.
Mineral deposits constitute the DRC’s principal source of wealth. The armed groups, FDLR, perpetuating the violence generate an estimated $144 million each year by trading in four main minerals in the Congo
Framework Opportunities
• Stimulate local and regional development
• Develop Democratic government
• Renegotiation of Trade Agreements
• Increased standard of living
• Implementation of renewable energy resources
• Stimulate continual improvement in the sustainability of supply chain
The 3 Part Framework
To truly overcome the conflict minerals curse in eastern Congo, a more comprehensive approach will be necessary; one that embraces a significant, sustained, and long-term investment in the Congo’s security, governance, and livelihoods over a multi-year timeframe
Initiative One
Establish International Governance Board to oversee the development of the DRC
DRC Marshall Plan
Initiative Two
Temporary Nationalization of Conflict Minerals
Joint-Venture Partnerships
DRC Marshall Plan
Initiative Three
The DRC can become a world exporter of clean, renewable energy, as infrastructure develops it would be based on these energy sources instead of natural gas, coal, and oil, thus becoming one of the first “clean” developed nations in the world
Conclusion
Hundreds of millions of dollars, if not, billions are being systematically spent on Congo initiatives but have provided little benefit to to Congolese people. This is do to lack of coordination between groups, civil unrest, and continued exploitation by multinational companies. Annual reports on the condition of the Congo state are of little use, what is needed is a concerted effort by the international community to develop the Congo state!
What’s Left to do
• Reorganization of paper, “flow”
• Focus on and define key terms
• More depth to my three initiative proposals
• Find place for differing view points
My Writing Process
• Technical, suited for political and business purposes
• Tend to work best under pressure
• I write papers that are random pieces of thought with little flow and then go back and edit, putting the pieces together