The individual who said that the presidency of
Rwanda was crafted in heaven was not a leader/elite he was an African the one
you classify as a people. May be you would read my posting before you jump on
it?
Em
Toronto
The Mulindwas Communication Group "With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is
in
anarchy"
Groupe de communication Mulindwas "avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans
l'anarchie"
You should avoid using the term "Africans" and ALWAYS distinguish between
African LEADERS/ELITES and the African PEOPLE.
The PEOPLE learn but the LEADERS/ELITES don't seem to have anything
upstairs.
Another coconut election is being organized in Egypt.Care to comment on
that?
George Ayittey, Washington, DC
Edward Mulindwa wrote:
NettersI ask again do we ever learn? Look on a nation like Congo which has
all its minerals flying to The States at a cost of its population, The
Americans are mining it from the UN.But do you remember that Paul Kagame man, the one who was called a
new leadership in Africa? Yes I am talking about the same Paul Kagame who
has been pushed into our throat as the most democratic man in Africa, in
fact one Rwandese stated it this way "Paul Kagame's leadership was created
in heaven" Well guess what Rwanda is also not accepted in the
council. How idiotic can
we be? Just curious !!!! EmToronto================================== U.S. Tries to Exclude Some >From U.N.
Group
By BARRY SCHWEID,
AP Diplomatic Writer Wed Aug 31, 4:38 PM
ET
WASHINGTON - The Bush
administration is trying to exclude seven nations from a new U.N. human
rights council, saying their own records make them unfit to sit in judgment
of others.
In a reform proposal,
Sudan, Liberia, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Ivory Coast, Somalia, Sierra Leone
and Rwanda would not be eligible to serve on a revised human rights
council.
The seven
countries are subject to sanctions by the U.N.
Security Council for human rights abuses and the
United States wants to keep "some of the worst offenders off," Kristen
Silverberg, assistant secretary of state for International Organizations
said Wednesday.
Forming a new human rights council to
replace the "discredited" Human Rights Commission is an important part of
the U.S. agenda for reform of the United
Nations, she said.
Besides excluding the seven nations, the
United States is proposing that appointments to a new council have the
support of at least two-thirds of the members of the U.N. General
Assembly.
That would be helpful in keeping some of
the worst offenders off, Silverberg said.
Other nations that also seek reform have
other approaches, and all will be discussed by U.N. Ambassador John Bolton
and other nations' U.N. representatives, she said.
"We feel very good about our agenda and on
progress we are making in persuading other member-states," Silverberg
said.
"There is a lot of support in the U.N. for
this kind of thing," she told reporters.
Reform is a key item on the agenda of the
U.N. General Assembly session. President
Bush is expected to touch on the problem in the annual
presidential speech Sept. 14 and Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice will spend more than a week in New York holding
talks on human rights and other issues.
The Mulindwas Communication
Group "With Yoweri
Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"
Groupe de communication Mulindwas "avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans
l'anarchie"