Charles London: The Congolese Need More Than Moral Outrage and New Technology from Hillary Clinton
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Hillary Clinton clearly learned about the power of technology from her primary campaign. She has a Senior Adviser on Innovation on her staff at the State Department and has taken the tools that launched Barack Obama to the White House into Africa on her current diplomatic mission. On twitter, #HillaryAfrica has become the official hashtag for tweeting her journey, and the White House used the data captured during the SMS and Twitter outreach surrounding President Obama's speech in Ghana last month to urge Africans to follow Secretary Clinton. On Wednesday in Nairobi she urged young Kenyans to use technology to fight corruption in their government. "There ought to be a way to use interactive media," she said, "especially the Internet obviously, and some of the new vehicles like Twitter, etc., to report in real time allegations of corruption." It's an exciting idea for the State Department: give people the tools and they, like the protesters in Iran, will solve our foreign policy dilemmas. "Phoning it in" takes on a whole new meaning if mobile technology can bring down Africa's corrupt Big Men. The market for minerals that go into manufacturing cell-phones is one of the major contributing factors to violence in the DRC, after all. Armies and rebel groups struggle for control of the mineral rich areas, which leads to the high incidence of sexual violence. Cell-phones, John Prendergrast of the ENOUGH! project notes, are the new Blood Diamonds. Using these same tools to hold perpetrators to account has its charms, but right now, there is no effective response mechanism even if attacks are reported. There is no policing. There are no courts where the survivors can get a fair hearing. There are no resources for a rapid-response. As one woman in the eastern DRC told Candice Knezevic, also of ENOUGH!, "the FDLR [a violent insurgent group] is in the bush, the Congolese army is in the town, and MONUC [the UN Peacekeeping force for the Congo] can't be found." According the Susan Rice's testimony, the United States currently contributes 93 military and police personnel to UN peacekeeping missions worldwide. Ninety-three professionals from the United States against a backdrop of roughly 100,000 soldiers and police contributed by other nations. The other four permanent members of the Security Council are among the sixty-five nations who contribute more than the U.S.: China with 2,153; France with 1,879; Russia with 328; and the United Kingdom with 283. While there are good reasons not to fill international peacekeeping forces with American soldiers, the discrepancy could be made up with greater logistical and financial support. While the US pays its peacekeeping dues in full and on time, we can do more. The European Union and Japan contribute over half of the UN Peacekeeping budget, while the United States contributes about a quarter; generous, certainly, but cold comfort to the people of the DRC. MONUC is still awaiting 3,000 additional soldiers and equipment promised to it in December of 2008. And while they wait, the cycle of violence continues.
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