Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Will America's Black Political Class Join In the Spoils of the Rape of Congo? Andy Young & Jesse Jackson Say It's OK.
Bruce A. Dixon, BAR managing editor
25 Sep 2014
🖨️ Print Article

Will America's Black Political Class Join In the Spoils of the Rape of Congo? Andy Young & Jesse Jackson Say It's OK.

By BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

A minor change has been made to this article, reflecting the fact that Rev. Jesse L. Jackson participated in Chicago's "Rwanda Day in 2001, not 2014, as erroneously indicated when the article was initially published.
-- bd

Last week Rwandan President Paul Kagame appeared in Atlanta for “Rwanda Day”. What Kagame said from the podium wasn't especially important. What was significant is that Atlanta and Chicago where he Kagame did a 2011 Rwanda Day are, after New York, the largest concentrations of black Americans on the continent, and that in Chicago he was greeted by Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, while in Atlanta he was billed with former mayor and UN Ambassador Andrew Young and Bernice King.

It's a marriage made not in heaven, but in the lucrative space where marriages of convenience are performed. The Kagame regime needs the best public relations it can buy to make up for the for the inconvenient facts. And there are a lot of inconvenient facts.

The PR says Rwanda is “Africa's Silicon Valley,” a land of neat villages and urban high rise buildings. In fact Rwanda is an informer-ridden, repressive police state where even small disagreements with the authorities can get you dispossessed or disappeared. Rwandan opposition political candidates are routinely imprisoned or murdered. Rwandan dissidents are hounded and pursued across Africa and Europe, sometimes assassinated, the journalists investigating the killings are publicly threatened using the president's social media accounts.

The PR says Rwanda's Paul Kagame ended the 1994 genocide. In fact, Kagame was trained in Uganda and by the US Army at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. He invaded Rwanda from Uganda in 1990 and brought the genocide with him, wading to power through the blood of hundreds of thousands. His forces, including child soldiers committed their fair share of Rwanda's 800,000 to 1 million murders in 1994, at least 10% according to Christian Davenport and Allan C. Stram. The "Hotel Rwanda Hutu­-on­Tutsi genocide" narrative was concocted to absolve Kagame's forces, to cover his tracks and those of his sponsors. The notion that the genocide occurred “because the West did not intervene” in Rwanda is laughably false. Paul Kagame and his army were themselves a “Western intervention.”

Soon after taking power in Rwanda, Paul Kagame's US supplied forces, along with the US supplied puppet armies of Uganda and Burundi, invaded neighboring Congo, where they have remained ever since, despite the attempts of several other African countries and Congo's central government, to dislodge them. Rwandan and Ugandan forces and their militias, which often include child soldiers, have depopulated vast zones of eastern Congo, where a large share of the world's easily available diamonds, gold, timber, and other mineral resources including coltan, a compound used in every computer, cell phone, aircraft and automobile are found.

Despite the deaths of at least 5 million have perished in Eastern Congo since the late 1990s, these resources are flowing steadily from Congo through Rwanda and Uganda mostly to Europe, North America and the West. By 2001, the UN had verified that Rwanda's and Uganda's rising exports of gold, diamonds, coltan, casserite, timber, platinum and more fueling those countries' growth were the proceeds of the genocidal rape and looting of the Congo. The horrific 5 million dead in Congo make it the largest single death toll since World War 2.

Far from the “Hotel Rwanda” myth, Rwandan president Paul Kagame didn't stop a pointless genocide in Rwanda. He is carrying out a far larger, and immensely profitable genocide in Congo to this day. His “Rwanda Day” stops in Chicago and Atlanta, where Rev. Jesse L. Jackson and Andrew Young appeared on his program, were part an open house, an overture to America's black political class and wannabees to cash in on the rape of the Congo. As a man with a bottomless hole in his soul, Rwanda's President Kagame is quick to spot the same disorder in others.

Paul Kagame urgently wants to connect with the hollow ghosts of America's old civil rights movement. He knows that America's own black political class is largely for sale or lease, ready to leverage its own brand for the interests of donors, whether banksters, charter and for profit schools, or telecoms, or whatever. Kagame has millions in lobbying money to spend and the black political class needs its cut. Global corporations looting blood soaked Congolese wealth through Rwanda and Uganda also need black faces to front for them on both sides of the water. The table is set. Everybody can get some.

The pictures of Rev. Jesse L. Jackson shaking hands with the bloody handed dictator of Rwanda in Chicago, of Andy Young pontificating on stage in Atlanta are the clearest signals yet that America's black political class are being welcomed to join in the profits made at the Africa end of global supply chains, the profits of 5 million dead in Congo.

To see Black Agenda Report's extensive coverage of the Rwanda-Congo crisis, over 40 articles over the last 8 years click here.

Bruce A. Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report, and a member of the state committee of the Georgia Green Party. He llives and works in Marietta GA and can be reached via this site's contact page, or via email at bruce.dixon(at)blackagendareport.com.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Ramzy Baroud
    Why Didn’t Iran Put Gaza on the Table? A Difficult Answer
    03 Jun 2026
    From Gaza to Tehran, from the politics of resistance to the limits of regional diplomacy, a pressing question has resurfaced amid the 2026 war: why was Palestine not explicitly placed at the center…
  • BAR Radio Logo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio May 29, 2026
    29 May 2026
    In this week’s segment, we talk about the latest iterations of immigration enforcement and their connections to racist public policy, mass incarceration, and the settler colonial foundations of the…
  • Malcolm X and Fidel Castro
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Solidarity and the Cuban Revolution
    29 May 2026
    Our guest is Dr. Rosemari Mealy. She is the author of "Fidel and Malcolm: Memories of a Meeting," which analyzes the significance of the 1960 meeting between Fidel Castro and Malcolm X. She has lived…
  • Delaney Hall
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Racism, Mass Incarceration, Settler Colonialism and Immigration Enforcement
    29 May 2026
    The Trump administration is accelerating policies meant not just to deport undocumented people, but to restrict every avenue of legal immigration from the Global South. Abraham Paulos is Deputy…
  • Ajamu Baraka
    ​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist , José Luis Granados Ceja , Kurt Hackbarth
    'The people who most love the game won't be able to go': Ajamu Baraka on Resistance to the World Cup
    27 May 2026
    In this episode of El Taller, hosts José Luis Granados Ceja and Kurt Hackbarth sit down with Ajamu Baraka, national organizer and spokesperson for the Black Alliance for Peace, a former vice-…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us