Gli aiuti umanitari all'Africa finanziano le guerre civili
- added May 15, 2008
- 1 response
-
-
-
- Svolte_Epocali
- ha aggiunto questo
-
Bono Vox, il leader degli U2, è ormai considerato la 'voce' della coscienza mondiale. Ma, a quanto pare, tra impegno in Africa e strigliate ai potenti della terra [*1], anche il nostro implacabile esattore umanitario ha qualche scheletro nell'armadio:
[*nzherald] Billions of dollars raised for African famine relief by celebrities Bono and Bob Geldof have instead funded civil war across the continent, says terrorism expert Dr Loretta Napoleoni. London-based Napoleoni, in Auckland to appear at the Writers & Readers Festival, has written two books, Terror Inc: Tracing the Money Behind Global Terrorism and Insurgent Iraq: Al-Zarqawi and the New Generation, on the economics of terrorism. Her latest book, Rogue Economics, studies the destabilising effect of economic globalisation, focusing in part on why more than half a trillion dollars worth of aid sent to Africa since the 1960s failed to reach the intended destination - developing the nations’ economies. That huge amount of aid, which includes money from the United Nations and donations generated by Live Aid for Ethiopia, organised by Geldof, and the Live 8 concert in 2005, organised by Bono, has instead “served as a rogue force, notably as an important form of terrorist financing” in countries such as Ethiopia, Somalia, Sudan, Zimbabwe, Tanzania and Kenya. Ethiopia, for example, received $1.8 billion in foreign aid between 1982-85, including a large contribution from Live Aid; $1.6 billion of that, she points out, was spent on buying military equipment.
In sintesi, secondo l'italiana Loretta Napoleoni, una delle più importanti esperte di terrorismo in circolazione, i miliardi di dollari raccolti da Bono Vox e Bob Geldof via Live Aid, non vanno a finire in aiuti umanitari per l'Africa, ma finanziano gruppi terroristici o l'acquisto di armamenti in stati come l'Etiopia, la Somalia, il Sudan, lo Zimbabwe, la Tanzania e il Kenia. Insomma, nazioni in cui si stanno consumando sanguinosi conflitti che inevitabilmente portano a crisi umanitarie.
[*nzherald] Billions of dollars raised for African famine relief by celebrities Bono and Bob Geldof have instead funded civil war across the continent, says terrorism expert Dr Loretta Napoleoni. London-based Napoleoni, in Auckland to appear at the Writers & Readers Festival, has written two books, Terror Inc: Tracing the Money Behind Global Terrorism and Insurgent Iraq: Al-Zarqawi and the New Generation, on the economics of terrorism. Her latest book, Rogue Economics, studies the destabilising effect of economic globalisation, focusing in part on why more than half a trillion dollars worth of aid sent to Africa since the 1960s failed to reach the intended destination - developing the nations’ economies. That huge amount of aid, which includes money from the United Nations and donations generated by Live Aid for Ethiopia, organised by Geldof, and the Live 8 concert in 2005, organised by Bono, has instead “served as a rogue force, notably as an important form of terrorist financing” in countries such as Ethiopia, Somalia, Sudan, Zimbabwe, Tanzania and Kenya. Ethiopia, for example, received $1.8 billion in foreign aid between 1982-85, including a large contribution from Live Aid; $1.6 billion of that, she points out, was spent on buying military equipment.
In sintesi, secondo l'italiana Loretta Napoleoni, una delle più importanti esperte di terrorismo in circolazione, i miliardi di dollari raccolti da Bono Vox e Bob Geldof via Live Aid, non vanno a finire in aiuti umanitari per l'Africa, ma finanziano gruppi terroristici o l'acquisto di armamenti in stati come l'Etiopia, la Somalia, il Sudan, lo Zimbabwe, la Tanzania e il Kenia. Insomma, nazioni in cui si stanno consumando sanguinosi conflitti che inevitabilmente portano a crisi umanitarie.
-
-
-
-
- Svolte_Epocali
- 1 month ago
-
quanto esposto è sicuramente vero; ciò non toglie che le buone intenzioni dei due artisti irlandesi ci siano.
Cosa facciamo? basta aiuti internazionali del tutto? non credo sia una soluzione più utile.
Due film interessanti su queste tematiche africane sono sicuramente "Blood diamond" e "Lord of War".
Login/Registration is required to add a response.
