Blogposts tagged 'Drc'

McKinsey's bad advice is threatening rainforests - it can't be trusted

Posted by John Sauven - 10 November 2011 at 4:10pm - 0 Comments
Devastated forest land in an Asia Pulp & Paper concession, Sumatra April 2010
All rights reserved. Credit: FB Anggoro/Greenpeace
Advice from consultancy firm McKinsey will lead to more deforestation, not less as it claims

This week, the Guardian uncovered evidence of global consultancy firm McKinsey profiting from the shake-up to the NHS. At the same time, McKinsey was paid £250,000 a year by the UK government for advice on the transition towards health secretary Andrew Lansley's vision for the service.

Conflicts and logging in Congo’s rainforests: the case of Danzer

Posted by Laura Kenyon - 8 November 2011 at 1:40pm - 0 Comments
Cut logs in Democratic Republic of Congo
All rights reserved. Credit: Greenpeace/Kate Davison
Logging in the Congo rainforest is often accompanied by violence and intimidation

In the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), violence associated with logging companies is not uncommon, but evidence and testimonies collected by Greenpeace show that the Yalisika community of Bosanga has been punished with exceptional violence.

Deforestation and violence in the Congo

Posted by rene.ngongo - 28 July 2011 at 1:17pm - 2 Comments
Logging in Ituri Forest of the Congo, DRC
All rights reserved. Credit: Jan-Joseph Stok/Greenpeace
Logging in the Democratic Republic of Congo

I’m writing from Kinshasa, the capital of Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). These days I am torn between outrage and bitterness when I hear about the unbelievable violence that has once again been unleashed on the heart of the Congo’s forest.

Local communities protest against Congo logging expansion plans

Posted by sarah - 6 October 2010 at 10:28am - 0 Comments
Hundreds of community representatives from Oshwe protesting at continued logging by SODEFOR

It's not just Greenpeace that has a problem with industrial scale logging. Local communities do too.

Video: buying Congo timber for beer and soap

Posted by jamie - 13 September 2010 at 12:22pm - 0 Comments

In these next two episodes, actress Marion Cottilard continues her journey through the Congo rainforest. Here, she sees first hand the wreckage left behind by the logging companies working in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

As we've heard many times before, the companies get permission to log from the local villages by promising to build schools and clinics, but these often never materialise and if they do, they're hopelessly inadequate. Or logging rights are sold for salt, beer and soap when the timber fetches thousands of dollars.

Video: Marion Cottilard meets Congo loggers

Posted by jamie - 18 August 2010 at 5:03pm - 0 Comments

The third and fourth films documenting Inception star Marion Cottilard's journey to the Congo see her head out into the rainforest.

After meeting her hosts in Oshwe and the local forestry administration, she follows Greenpeace campaigners to see timber the loggers have left behind. Despite including sizeable tree trunks, they've been abandoned because they won't fetch enough money to make it worth the effort.

Actress Marion Cottilard discovers the problems of the Congo rainforest

Posted by jamie - 6 August 2010 at 11:12am - 0 Comments

In June, Oscar-winning French superstar Marion Cottilard - currently playing in Inception at all good multiplexes - took a trip to the Congo rainforest with Greenpeace campaigners to see for herself the effect that the logging industry is having on the forest and the people who live there.

Activist murder shows perilous side of campaigning in DRC

Posted by jamie - 9 June 2010 at 4:29pm - 0 Comments

It's easy to forget that, even though we moan about discredited political systems and infringement of civil liberties, in the UK we don't actually have it that bad. It's rare that anyone in the UK would feel in danger for speaking out against the government but of course that's not the case in other parts of the world. A shocking reminder of this came with the news last week that a prominent human rights activist was murdered in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Floribert Chebeya Bahizire was the executive director of La Voix des Sans Voix (Voice of the Voiceless), an organisation he set up in 1983 to expose human rights abuses and injustice in the DRC. But last Wednesday in Kinshasa he was found dead in his car, and his driver is still missing. According to the news wires, there'll be an investigation into Bahizire's death but there are questions over how revealing it will be. So much so that an open letter has been sent to the president Joseph Kabila from over 50 human rights groups, advocating an open, impartial inquiry.

Of course, Greenpeace has a team in Kinshasa and the challenges of campaigning there are markedly different than from a comfortable office in London. Intimidation and murder against those working to improve the lives of those who are disenfranchised and disregarded is unacceptable wherever it happens, and with the 50th anniversary of independence for the DRC approaching at the end of the month, Bahizire's murder will cast a long shadow over the celebrations.

Sarah blogs from our newest Greenpeace office in the Congo

Posted by sarah - 24 November 2009 at 1:06pm - 0 Comments

Sarah is in Kinshasa, visiting our Congo office on their first anniversary.

I write from our office in Kinshasa, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). In some ways it's very like any other Greenpeace office. There are pictures of the Rainbow Warrior on the wall, people on phones rush from room to room, journalists and cameramen walk in and out. There's a shout and we all crowd round the TV to watch one of our colleagues, Rene Ngongo, who won the alternative livelihood award a few weeks ago for his work in the DRC, giving an interview.

Alternative Nobel prize awarded to Greenpeace staffer

Posted by sarah - 13 October 2009 at 3:55pm - 0 Comments

Rene Ngongo, winner of the 2009 Right Livelihood award

For as long as I can remember, I have played a game with myself - imagining what it is like to be someone else in a different time or a different place. It's just a bit of fun and kept me entertained for hours on long train journeys before I got my laptop. Sometimes though I wonder whether I would have the courage to stand up for what I believe in if I didn't have the luxury of being here in the UK, at this moment in time.

Would I have joined the White Rose movement, students at Munich University who were executed after spreading anti-Nazi leaflets during the height of the Third Reich regime? Would I have had the courage to sit at the back of the bus like Rosa Parks did or demonstrate in the streets in Tehran following the election results?

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