Communiqué de la Rencontre des peuples pour la dignité des migrant-e-s 20 juillet 2023 DECLARATION DE TUNIS En Afrique, pas de développement sans mobilité ! En Europe, pas de répit sans le développement de l’Afrique ! Les associations de la société civile tunisienne, du Maghreb, de l’Afrique de l’Ouest et…
Ann Garrison interviews Bénédicte Kumbi Ndjoko: Congo is indeed in a critical situation. We know how much its people have suffered since the genocides in Rwanda and all the displacement they caused, then by the wars that Rwanda and Uganda waged against Congo from 1996 to 1997 and then from 1998 to 2003, with the support of the US, UK, and their allies. Today some observers speak of Congo as a post-conflict country, but it’s still in a low-intensity conflict, off and on, hot and cold. A conflict that drags on like this can become even deadlier than declared war, as it has in the North and South Kivu Provinces bordering Rwanda, Uganda, and Burundi. More than a million of the 4.49 million internally displaced people are in North Kivu Province.
Markku Vesikon raportti Pakolaisavun ryhmän vierailusta Liberiassa tammikuun alussa. "Tämänhetkisen valmiussuunnitelman mukaan UNHCR varautuu vastaanottamaan noin 100,000 pakolaisen tarpeet ja on siksi valmistelemassa hätäavustuspyyntöä, johon tarvitaan
quot: "While the trans-Atlantic slave trade brought large numbers of Africans to the United States as forced migrants from the 16th to the 19th centuries, significant voluntary migration from Africa to the United States did not begin in earnest until the
Dr Ama Biney, a pan-Africanist and historian living in the United Kingdom. "The GWOT has replaced the Cold War and given the US ruling military and political elite a justification to extend their Monroe Doctrine to the entire planet."
Ajachi Chakrabarti 2013-12-07 on immigrants in Khirki and Nigerians in Goa. Obodo Uzoma Simon found murdered in Goa 30.10.13 "The next day, after the police managed to collect the body, the hearse was stopped by a group of around 50 West Africans, mostly Nigerians. They placed Simon’s body on the road and blocked NH 17, the arterial north-south road in the state." "Speaking to a television channel on the incident, activist Oscar Rebello was more blunt. “... Here, the biggest problem is that the drug trade of the coastal belt runs the political economy of the coastal belt. Period.”