Friday 23 November 2012

Jesus’ rebel??? Bishop Jean-Marie Runiga the spokes person of M23 rebels admits visiting Kampala but says they will not leave Goma





Bishop Jean Marie Runiga spokes person for M23 rebels

38 Ye have heard that it hath been said, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth: 39 But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. (Matthew 5:38-39)

 

Hidden pictures : An expectant mother, one of the victims of M23 Aggression

19 Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath: for it is written, Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord. 20Therefore if thine enemy hunger, feed him; if he thirst, give him drink: for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head. 21 Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.(Romans 12 19-21)

Bishop Jean Marie Runiga, a rebel against the Lord Jesus Christ



FIRST READ:

Bishop Jean Marie Runiga, Becomes a spokes person for the M23: Using Confusion, misinformation and disinformation to Hide the Central role of USA, her allies and client states in the Conflict in the ‘Democratic’ republic of Congo(DRC)


http://watchmanafrica.blogspot.com/2012/07/bishop-jean-marie-runiga-becomes-spokes.html



Chaos by Design: When aggressors become mediators: When wolves pretend to be sheep: The US supports Museveni Congo mediation: M23 rebels capture Goma as the UN looks on: Kabila and Kagame fly to Kampala for talks

http://watchmanafrica.blogspot.com/2012/11/chaos-by-design-when-aggressors-become.html

 

UN+UN peace keeping in Congo =American New World Order: UN security council condemns Goma takeover by M23 rebels: Rebels accused of gross human rights violations: DR soldiers surrender to M23 rebels

http://watchmanafrica.blogspot.com/2012/11/unun-peace-keeping-in-congo-american.html




The Analysis I made on Thursday, 12 July 2012

USA and her new world order allies have  really mastered the art of deception. They control the mainstream media and use it to misinform and disinfrom  the masses around the world. They have really managed to deceive the world that the conflict in the DRC is just an internal conflict with no new world order tentacles. The USA likes a puppet regime in the DRC and would like the confusion to continue so that American and European companies continue to loot Congo minerals unnoticed. It has been evident over the years that the villages were people were flushed due to rebel insurgencies were turned into mining  centers of American and European companies . So, war must persist so that these people do not return and disrupt the looters.  It is surprising that they are very many naïve Africans who think that Uganda is neutral in this conflict and some naively think that Rwanda has nothing to do with the conflict. Just keep on fowing this conflict , it will not take so long before more contradictions emerge. A person with an analytic mind can easily see these contradictions and cover-ups. 
 
USA and her allies will always stick to the old trick of   using Christian ministers  such as Bishop Jean Marie Runiga to safeguard their  imperialistic  interests.  They think that by bringing a Christian bishop into the high ranks of the M23, they  are giving M23 credibility and this will fool many dominionism Christians  to link the rebels to Christ.

Congo rebels reject call to leave Goma


Publish Date: Nov 22, 2012

Rebels in eastern Congo on Thursday rejected regional calls to withdraw from the city of Goma and threatened to press an advance until President Joseph Kabila agrees to peace talks.

The M23 rebels, widely believed to be backed by Rwanda, said on Wednesday they would "liberate" all the vast central African country after seizing the provincial capital Goma.

"We'll stay in Goma waiting for negotiations," Bishop Jean-Marie Runiga, head of the M23 rebel movement's political arm, told Reuters. "They're going to attack us and we're going to defend ourselves and keep on advancing."

Runiga said he did not think Kabila's offer to look into their grievances was serious.

"I'm not confident, because I've already waited for three months in Kampala for talks," he said.

Foreign ministers from the Great Lakes region on Wednesday ordered the rebels to leave Goma and halt their advance through a region mined for gold, tin, and coltan. Runiga said Uganda and Rwanda had no authority to order the rebels to leave.

M23 wanted to ensure the safety of civilians and the return of aid groups that fled Goma during its capture, he added. Reuters 



God’s politics!!!!! : Check out the  article below and see how this so called Christian blogger  is trying to fools you into thinking that the Conflict in Congo has no western tentacles.

 
M23 rebels: These look like child soldiers

Faith Amid the Rising Conflict in Eastern Congo

http://sojo.net/blogs/2012/07/23/faith-amid-rising-conflict-eastern-congo

by Jayme Cloninger 07-23-2012 | 2:02pm

Faith, for many in eastern Congo, is a source of hope in an environment where optimism is often in short supply. Many Congolese consider faith communities to be among the few trusted institutions in a society (and a government) rife with corruption.


As the situation in eastern Congo has markedly worsened in recent weeks, the church and faith communities have been at the center of efforts to end violence and create space for peace.

Violence has rapidly escalated in eastern Congo since a new rebel movement known as M23 emerged in April. M23 is composed of several hundred Congolese soldiers, loyal to the former Rwandan backed rebel movement — the CNDP — who were subsumed into the Congolese army in 2009 as part of an opaque peace agreement between the rebels and the governments of Congo and Rwanda.

These elements loyal to the CNDP and Rwanda see control of land and resources as essential to their survival. This most recent mutiny began when that control was once again threatened by the Congolese government and international pressure for the arrest of former CNDP leader and wanted international war criminal, General Bosco Ntaganda.

As a result, clashes between the Congolese military and M23 have sparked a surge of ethnic violence against civilians, and displaced more than 200,000 people in the area.

As the home of horrific sexual violence and the deadliest conflict since World War II, with the death toll from the nearly two decades of conflict reaching more than 6 million, this chaotic atmosphere is nothing new for eastern Congo. But this latest uptick in violence highlights the regional nature of the conflict, with neighboring countries continuing to destabilize Congo for their own economic and security reasons.

In May, the United Nations Group of Experts released a report detailing the mounting evidence against the Rwandan government, and linking Kagame’s military officers to the formation and support of the M23 operation. The report accuses Rwanda of providing M23 with ammunition, weapons, and recruits, including child soldiers.

The international community’s response has thus far been hesitant, but several key regional actors and donor nations are starting to take more robust action.

For example, the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region, or ICGLR, agreed in principle on a strategy to defuse the crisis in eastern Congo that included the creation of a neutral, international force to monitor the Rwanda and Congo border area. Additionally, the U.S. government recently cut a portion of military financing to Rwanda, sending a strong signal about future bilateral support.
 
The strongest international statement condemning this new surge of violence has come from the faith communities in eastern Congo, which decried the “aggression of Rwanda” and spoke on behalf of civil society.
As Jacque Bahati of the African Faith and Justice Network explains, faith communities “have been the only trusted institutions to provide local social and economic services to the people, where the state has abandoned those tasks.”

In the press release and statement to the UN Security Council, the faith coalition from Congo declared:

“This unjust and unjustifiable invasion [by Rwanda] undermines efforts to reconciliation and reconstruction of the Congolese nation. It is accompanied by an unprecedented cross-border crime and a systematic plundering of natural resources of the Democratic Republic of Congo.”

The role of faith communities in calling for the full exposure of Rwanda’s involvement in this conflict is essential. As stated by the coalition, the rising conflict is standing in the way of any local efforts for reconciliation, and as long as Rwanda keeps a footprint in eastern Congo, the region will remain destabilized.

So how does the global faith community respond to the situation in eastern Congo?

Faith communities, especially those with missions and support networks in both Congo and Rwanda, are in a unique position to show leadership in supporting affected Congolese communities and their efforts to bring peace and stability in Central Africa.

To learn more about the situation in Congo, visit the Enough Project’s website  or click on any of the links below.