Almost every single leader who has stood up for Africa’s right to economic self-determination has been eliminated — either physically or politically!!!!!!!

The question still being asked by Africans, decades after they gained a nominal political independence, is: ‘How long shall they kill our prophets while we stand aside and look?’

This question was memorably put forward by the iconic Bob Marley so many years ago, but our prophets continue to be killed.

One by one, our most steadfast leaders have been eliminated, to the point where Africa is hard-pressed to point out more than three people who are advancing the continental agenda for economic freedom.

Almost every single leader who has stood up for Africa’s right to economic self-determination has been eliminated – either physically or politically.

It started with the very first successful anti-colonial movement in Ghana where Kwame Nkrumah was the victim of a concerted propaganda campaign that saw him pushed out of power through a coup.

Today, the average Ghanaian admits that an error was made in not recognizing Nkrumah’s value, and elections in that country are now premised on being pro-Nkrumah or not. Patrice Lumumba’s story is one of the saddest in Africa’s quest for economic freedom, and his brutal murder still rankles today.

The same happened to Thomas Isdore Sankara, Steve Biko and many others who stood up for African dignity.

And it was not just in Africa.

Malcolm X died young because of what he believed was the rightful place of the black person in the United States of America – ‘the land of the free’.

Fortunately, while these icons may have been physically and/or politically eliminated, their ideas live on.

The problem is: how many in Africa and the African Diaspora have the courage to stand up and take these ideas forward? Perhaps a little relook at some of these icons will re-energize the struggle to reclaim our dignity as a people.

Patrice Lumumba

In October of 1960 Lumumba said, ‘Dead, living, free, or in prison on the orders of the colonialists, it is not I who counts.’

‘It is the Congo, it is our people for whom independence has been transformed into a cage where we are regarded from the outside.’

‘History will one day have its say, but it will not be the history that Brussels, Paris, Washington, or the United Nations will teach, but that which they will teach in the countries emancipated from colonialism and its puppets… a history of glory and dignity.’

His faithfulness to the idea of a united Congo was as real a threat then as it is today.

A solid Congo state, with its great natural and human resources, would be a global economic power that the West would not take as lightly as they do the fractured state that exists at present.

Perhaps Lumumba’s biggest mistake was a lack of tact in exposing his grand plans for his country.

It was probably in that memorable Independence Day speech in which he challenged the core of imperialism that he sealed his fate and the decision was made to murder him.

After all, the former colonial powers have always been content to let Africa hold political power at home but will not brook any interference in how the economy is run and resources are allocated.

In a meeting held with security advisers in August 1960, two months after Congo achieved its formal independence from Belgium, US President Dwight Eisenhower ordered the CIA to ‘eliminate’ Lumumba, according to an account by Robert Johnson.

‘There was a stunned silence for about 15 seconds and the meeting continued,’ Johnson recalled.

CIA director Allen Dulles referred to Lumumba as a ‘mad dog’, and on January 17, 1961 the Congolese leader drew his last breath.

In the last weeks of his life, when he was being dragged around with a rope around his neck, Lumumba still carried himself with great dignity as well as courage.

Even when he faced torture he did not plead for mercy.

It is this that contributes to Lumumba’s martyrdom – a powerful martyrdom that should make him more influential in death than in life. This is why Lumumba is still celebrated as the ‘best son of Africa’, the ‘Lincoln of the Congo’, the ‘Black Messiah’ whose life and death were all about the fight for justice.

Malcolm X

‘If violence is wrong in America, violence is wrong abroad. If it is wrong to be violent defending black women and black children and black babies and black men, then it is wrong for America to draft us, and make us violent abroad in defense of her.

‘And if it is right for America to draft us, and teach us how to be violent in defense of her, then it is right for you and me to do whatever is necessary to defend our own people right here in this country,’ said the late Malcolm X.

Born in poverty in a land that is regarded as the land of the free, Malcolm X grew up in a violent environment.

His father was killed by the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan and this event had a profound effect on his views.

Through his ‘any means necessary’ slogan, Malcolm X influenced and continues to shape the political landscape so many decades after his death.

In his book ‘Dreams From My Father’, US President Barack Obama says he was inspired by Malcolm X.

‘Only Malcolm X’s autobiography seemed to offer something different. His repeated acts of self-creation spoke to me; the blunt poetry of his words, his unadorned insistence on respect, promised a new and uncompromising order, martial in its discipline, forged through sheer force of will…’

‘Malcolm himself seemed to have safely abandoned toward the end of his life. He spoke of a wish he’d once had, the wish that the white blood that tan through him, there by an act of violence, might somehow be expunged,’ says Obama.

Just like Stephen Bantu Biko, Malcolm X radicalized black youth and showed them that we can be so much more than our oppressors say we are.

On February 21, 1965 Malcolm X was shot 16 times by suspected FBI agents while going to address a meeting on African unity.

Thomas Isdore Sankara

Thomas Sankara (‘The Lion King’) was killed on October 15, 1987 after leading Burkina Faso for four years at the orders of a ‘friend’, Blaise Compaoré.

This is the same Compaoré who in 2008 supported the United States, France and Britain in trying to get the UN Security Council to begin proceedings to invade Zimbabwe only to be stopped by Russia, China, South Africa, Vietnam and others.

The revolution Sankara led between 1983 and 1987 was one of the most creative and radical that Africa produced in the decades after independence.

Sankara wanted African countries to follow a genuine alternative to Western-style modernization; something in which he was influenced by Patrice Lumumba.

It was thus not surprising that Sankara met the same fate as his mentor.

Why they were killed

Some of the people who are now most vocal in their praise of our dead African heroes include many who in the past criticized some of their actions and speeches most savagely while they were still alive.

Lumumba and Sankara were taken away from Africa through the connivance of Africans working with outside forces.

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The reason for killing these icons is the same reason why today the West cannot stomach Robert Mugabe: we should not control our own resources and must remain chattel of the West.

Lumumba, Malcolm X and Sankara were true sons of Africa, and in their short unhappy lifetimes, they showed us that we have it in us to excel

Confessions of a CIA agent: … how the imperial powers control Africa by remote control.(Chief of Station, Congo: Fighting the Cold War in a Hot Zone by Larry Devlin)(Book review)..

Larry Devlin was the CIA chief of station in DRCongo in 1960 when the American president, Dwight D. Eisenhower, authorised the assassination of the Congolese prime minister, Patrice Lumumba, by lethal poisoning. Devlin was given the job to kill Lumumba, but his conscience so smote him that he kept the poisons for so long that the job was taken from him and given to someone else. In his memoirs published this month, Devlin unwittingly exposes how the imperial powers run Africa by remote control. This is one book every African must read. Osei Boateng reports.

The evil that men do lives after them … But for Larry Devlin, the CIA’s chief of station in DRCongo for much of the first two decades of independence, “the evil” that he and his colleagues and superiors at the CIA headquarters and in various American governments wrought on Congo appears to live not after him but with him right now.

Devlin now lives in France, and from his own account (recounted in his new book, Chief of Station, Congo–Fighting the Cold War in a Hot Zone published this month), he appears to carry a load of guilt for what the Americans did in the early 1960s in truncating the progress of what is arguably Africa’s richest country (natural resource wise).

But, not surprisingly, Devlin tries to expiate the guilt by finding refuge in the Cold War. “We removed [Prime Minister Patrice] Lumumba from power because the Soviet Union wanted to use him and Congo as a bridge to other African countries” is his favourite refrain throughout the book. But this excuse does him no credit as anybody with the most tenuous grasp of history knows that Congo was not the first African country to gain independence, or the first to be ruled by a “radical” prime minister friendly to Moscow.

Ghana gained its independence in 1957, Guinea in 1958 and several others in 1960, and some of their leaders were far more radical and friendlier to Moscow than Lumumba was. Moreover, Lumumba was new on the scene and given no chance at all to consolidate his government, let alone rule the country. If the Soviets did not use Kwame Nkrumah’s Ghana or Sekou Toure’s Guinea as a bridgehead to other parts of Africa, why would they use Lumumba’s Congo? But this logic is lost on Devlin.

Writing in 2006 (for publication in 2007), and after all that has happened to DRCongo since 1960 largely because of the elimination of Lumumba, Devlin insists that the American and Western action in Congo was to prevent the Soviet Union–their Cold War enemy–from achieving their objective of influencing and eventually controlling Lumumba and, thus, Congo and the nine countries it shares borders with, namely: Congo Brazzaville, Central African Republic, Sudan, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, Zambia, and Angola.

But he gives the game terribly away in his very next paragraph: “Had the Soviets gained a position of control or influence in the nine countries and colonies,” Devlin claims, “they would have had an extraordinary power base in Africa. In addition to gaining control or influence over the minerals, raw materials, and oil produced in Africa, it would also have greatly increased their influence in the Third World, as well as extending their influence within the UN” [emphasis added].

Translated into simple English, Devlin is saying natural resource control was the real motivation for the American and Western machinations in Congo. Fighting communism was just a smokescreen. After all, Devlin insists that “Lumumba was not a communist”.

He writes: “Control of the Congo, moreover, would give the Soviet Union a near monopoly on the production of cobalt, a critical mineral used in missiles and many other weapons systems, since the Congo and the USSR were the world’s main suppliers of the mineral. Such a scenario would put the US’s own weapons and space programmes at a severe disadvantage.”

What he doesn’t add is that the uranium used for the atomic bombs that Washington dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during the last months of the Second World War, came from DRCongo. And without Congo’s diamonds, the British and their American allies could not have defeated Hitler. So Congo’s natural resources were, and still are, vital for American and Western survival (including today’s magic mineral, coltan, of which Congo has 80% of Africa’s reserves).

Perhaps the most stunning revelation Devlin makes–albeit unwittingly–is the confirmation that the metropolitan powers run Africa by remote control. In telling about how the Americans ran Congo from 1960 and throughout the Mobutu years, Devlin unwittingly provides graphic details of the rule by remote control through which the imperial powers tell supposedly “independent” African leaders what to do and how to do it.

In a major interview with New African in May 2002, Zimbabwe’s president, Robert Mugabe, hinted about the rule by remote control without being specific. Talking about the British attitude to his government’s land reform programme, President Mugabe said: “The sad thing is that they [the British] don’t want to examine and analyse what has gone wrong. They want to go inexorably on this path of hard attitude, but we say to them, ‘OK, they are in Britain and we are in Zimbabwe; they may do this or that, but our people can never, ever allow themselves to come once again under British control–remote control or direct control never!” As our long-time readers will remember, our May 2002 front cover headline was: Mugabe: No Remote Control Ever Again! But what Mugabe said didn’t actually hit home until Devlin’s book came out this month.

He describes in great detail how the Americans run the show in Kinshasa (Leopoldville at the time). He himself was the linchpin, running 22 agents and collaborators, and telling Mobutu and his friends, including the ceremonial president, Joseph Kasavubu, who had crossed over from Lumumba’s side to Mobutu’s, what to do, how to do it and when to do it. The so-called “Congolese leaders” were mere pawns in the American and Western chess game. Even the decision by Lumumba to invite UN troops to Congo–a disastrous decision it turned out in the end–came from the then American ambassador in Kinshasa, Clare H. Timberlake (or Tim, for short).

From Devlin’s account, the Americans had a field day running the then Colonel Joseph Mobutu, President Kasavubu, Justin Bomboko, Cyrille Adoula, Victor Nendeka and their other pro-Western friends for the benefit of America’s national interest. On one such occasion, Devlin recounts how Mobutu, Bomboko and Nendeka consulted him over the problems they were having with the pro-Lumumba Ghanaian ambassador in Kinshasa.

“I naively suggested that all they had to do was declare the ambassador persona non grata, and he would leave the country,” Devlin recalls. “I’ve already done that,” Bomboko, the foreign minister on Mobutu’s side, replied. “And what happened?” Devlin asked.

Source: reunionblackfamily.com