Bedrövligt hur hon svartmålas. Detta kommer från världen mest inflytelserika tidning, The New York Times. Läs detta! Hon hade kommit långt på spåret som ledde mot att Kongos regering ligger bakom oroligheterna. FN stöder regeringen som stöder oroligheterna. Allt för att Apple och andra skall kunna köpa billiga råvaror.
Sverige är på väg in i samma samma neoliberala kaos, med EU, fast vi inte hunnit lika långt ... ännu.
För ögonblicket hinner jag inte skriva mer, men jag återkommer nog senare.
Hon hade gjort stora avslöjanden.
Citat:
But according to documents kept on Ms. Catalán’s computer and to others familiar with the case, she had been scrutinizing a government minister, Clément Kanku, for his possible role in inciting violence in the Congolese region of Kasai last year.
Mr. Kanku, the minister of development until he was fired this month, had close links to the militia fighters in the area; he had been brought into President Joseph Kabila’s coalition government last year to bring the rebels to heel.
Ms. Catalán kept 130 files in a folder on her computer under Mr. Kanku’s name. Among them was a recorded phone conversation in which he seems to discuss setting fire to a town in the region, Tshimbulu, with a subordinate. They talk about a successful jailbreak, targeted assassinations of a colonel and other officials, and general mayhem.
“We burnt Tshimbulu,” the subordinate is heard saying.
“It’s good that we burn everything; that is good news,” Mr. Kanku replies.
“The colonel is in his house, and we’re burning down the house so he burns to death,” the subordinate says.
Mr. Kanku asks: “Did you kill the colonel’s bodyguards?”
“Yes, we beat his bodyguards on the head with our batons,” the subordinate responds.
Though it was unclear how she had obtained it, Ms. Catalán had the recording in her possession in January, according to people familiar with her work, the same month she wrote in her diary about the big breakthrough. She had also texted Mr. Sharp, her colleague in Congo: “I have big stuff going on.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/20/w...-of-congo.html