For an excellent explanation of the cause behind the unending war in the Democratic Republic of Congo, see the New York Times article that ran Sunday, November 17, 2008.
Reporter Lydia Polgreen tells how Colonel Samy Matumo and his renegade brigade collects an outlandish $80,000,000 annually from the mining region he controls in North Kivu. She also describes the living and working conditions faced by the people of the region, which could have been lifted unchanged from accounts of King Leopold's reign over the Congo.
Polgreen's explanation of how a private army can operate unfettered in today's Congo is spot-on, too. She explores the quandaries faced by the UN, the Congolese government to whom Colonel Matumo technically reports, and the South African mining company that has the legal right to mine the area.
The situation described in this article is emblematic of the struggle to control the Congo's riches, a struggle that has cost nearly six million lives in the last ten years.
Dave Donelson, author of Heart of Diamonds a romantic thriller about blood diamonds in the Congo.
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2008
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November
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- Congo War Spreads HIV/AIDS
- Nkunda's Larger Plan
- Slash and Burn
- Arrest Nkunda Now Petition Online
- Heart of Diamonds Interviews and Reviews
- Hazy Hot
- Rebels Win First Battle In Congo War
- Refugees Flee to Uganda
- The Greatest Silence: Rape In The Congo
- Slavonian Grebe
- NY Times Explains Congo Perfectly
- Online Book Tour For Heart of Diamonds
- Adolescent Mountain Gorillas
- Scaup, Holme Fen
- What Does Nkunda Want?
- A Refugee Story
- Civilians Killed By Both Sides In Congo Conflict
- Yet One More Congo War Fatality
- The Wave
- More About Heart of Diamonds
- Full War Around The Corner In Congo
- A couple from Cornwall
- My Web Tour Begins
- Tree Sleeping Lion
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