by Thomas C. Mountain
"250,000 dead in
Somalia from starvation equals 10,000 dying a month, 300 or more dying a day on
average.”
When award winning
journalist Jeremy Scahill landed at Mogadishu’s International Airport in the
summer of 2011 Somalia was in the midst of its worst drought and famine in 60
years. Yet when Mr. Scahill reported on his visit he seemed blissfully unaware
of the hundreds of Somalis that were starving to death every day not very many
miles from the hotel where he was staying.
He also didn’t write
about the food and medical aid blockade being imposed on Somalis next door in
the Ogaden by the western supported Ethiopian regime, something the
International Federation of Jurists (IFJ) has called “a genocide” and demanded
the ICC prosecute.
The UN has admitted
that at least 250,000 Somalis in Somalia proper starved to death during the
famine Jeremy Scahill landed in the midst of, something I had predicted when I
exposed that the UN, knowing full well the extent of the drought, had budgeted
less then 10 cents a day for food to feed the starving.
The Great Horn of
Africa Famine stared at the beginning of 2011 and lasted about 2 years. 250,000
dead in Somalia from starvation equals 10,000 dying a month, 300 or more dying
a day on average. And this just in Somalia where there was aid being
distributed. Next door in the Ogaden, with a population of almost as many as in
Somalia the same famine was raging and no aid what so ever was being allowed.
"Genocide or
drones, what’s more important?”
Even Doctors Without
Borders (MSF) and the Red Cross (ICRC) had been expelled from the Ogaden by the
Ethiopian Regime, the Prime Minister of which was later eulogized at his
funeral by none other than Susan Rice, presently National Security Advisor to
Barack Obama.
If Jeremy Scahill
didn't know about the hundreds that were dying from starvation every day all
around him when he was carrying out his “investigative journalism” in Mogadishu
in the summer of 2011 than the question has to be asked “Why not?”
If he knew about this
enormous crime against humanity and instead chose to write about “secret CIA
prisons” and the murder of several hundred via the USA’s drone assassination
program in the Horn of Africa, a much “sexier” topic, shouldn't other
investigative journalists be questioning his priorities? Genocide or drones,
what’s more important?
Today Mr. Scahill
picks up a paycheck signed by Pierre Omidyar who persists in trying to rape the
lush tropical hillside overlooking Hanalei Bay on Kauai, Hawaii by developing
multimillion dollar estates for his fellow 1%.
The real dirty wars in
Africa remain unknown to the worlds peoples, thanks in part to a smokescreen,
how ever blissfully ignorant or well intended, about drones and high tech
murders that diverted attention from the deaths of hundreds of thousands of
Africans, whose “expiration by starvation” was sanctioned by the highest levels
of the Obama White House.
Thomas C. Mountain is
a life long revolutionary activist and educator who has been living and writing
from Eritrea since 2006. He can be reached at thomascmountain at g mail dot
com.
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