Feral Jundi

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Industry Talk: U.N. And Africa To Discuss Mercenaries, Private Military And Security Companies

   Hey, I heard Eric Cartman might crash this party?  lol (I had to….. sorry)

   Back on topic. What I think the responsible thing for this group to do, is actually bring in folks from the companies to give some balance to the conversation.  I also think that if the UN wants to truly be honest during this discussion, they best bring up the fact that the UN is using the services of private military companies.  I have documented that several times on this blog, and I just wanted to make sure that before these folks get all worked up about the negative, that they take a responsible look at the positive as well.

   I think it is also time for these folks to have a conversation with guys who actually do care about Africa, and not just these disaster capitalist aid groups who call themselves ‘the saviors of the dark continent’.  pfffft.  Guys like Eeben, who have put blood, sweat and tears into that continent, and have put action to words for years, are the folks the UN should be talking too. Or the UN can keep screwing the pooch in places like the Congo, and think they are doing something humane?

    For the record, I never got an invitation to the party.  If you guys do decide to send some invitations, I promise to bring the chips and dip. –Matt

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UN and Africa to discuss mercenaries and private military and security companies 

25 February 2010

GENEVA – Representatives of some 25 from African States will meet on 3 and 4 March in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, with the UN Working Group on the use of mercenaries* to discuss the presence and activities of mercenaries and private military and security companies (PMSCs) on the continent.

“This regional consultation in Africa is of particular importance given that the region is becoming a key market for the security industry”, said Shaista Shameem, who currently heads the Working Group. “However, PMSCs have remained largely unregulated, insufficiently monitored and rarely held accountable for the international crimes and human rights abuses they have committed.”

This meeting is the fourth of a series of five regional consultations which will end with the consultation with the Western European and Others Group in Geneva in April 2010. “This mandate was created in 1987 in a context in which the right of peoples to self-determination in Africa was often threatened by mercenary activities”, said Ms. Shameem.

State representatives will exchange good practices and lessons learned on the monitoring and regulation of the activities of private military and security companies and in particular on the adoption of a possible draft convention regulating their activities.

(more…)

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Books: Author And Contractor– David A. Johnson

   For the record, I have not read any of his books, but I am definitely intrigued.  It’s not so often that you find guys in this industry that are current contractors, and authors of several books.  If any of the readership has anything to say about his stuff, I am all ears. They certainly sound interesting. Check it out, and you can buy his books through his website. –Matt

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David A. Johnson.

Thanks for stopping by:

As a private military contractor I have traveled and worked all around Latin America and West Africa. I currently fly for the Department of Defense, but in the past I’ve worked for other government agencies and  multi-national oil companies.

However, my real passion is writing. In 2003 I wrote a short book on how to get a job as a military contractor. In 2007 I finished my first novel, Arauca. By 2009 I finished my second novel, Asgaard.

Both novels feature characters that work as private military contractors. These characters interact in political settings taken from tomorrow’s news. Arauca is based in Colombia, and Asgaard takes place in the Congo.

My third novel should be finished in 2010.

(more…)

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Haiti: The Growth Of Aid And The Decline Of Humanitarianism, From The Lancet

   Boy, this is a big slam on aid organizations.  Bravo to the Lancet for having the courage to point this out, and especially during this time with the Haiti earthquake.  I am sure they will get all sorts of hate mail.  The truth hurts though, and these aid groups do the same things in places like Africa or war zones.

   So why is this on Feral Jundi?  Part of the reason is that there is no regulatory apparatus in place to keep these aid organizations in check. Where is the scrutiny, and why do we give them a free pass?  My industry is constantly getting the label as disaster capitalists, yet you never hear that kind of language used to describe aid organizations.

   And when it comes to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, security is pretty damn important. You can’t be happy or live in peace, when rebels or criminals are actively trying to kill you and your family for whatever reason.  You can’t eat, if rebels and criminals are stealing your food or destroying your farm lands.  It takes security forces to step up and be that sheep dog, in order for others to be able to eat and live in peace.  Yet my industry continues to get this treatment as if we are less than, or not needed. Pffffft. We put our life on the line to protect others, and that is our value in the world of disasters and wars. And to me, we are worth every penny spent.

   Finally, what really kills me about these aid organizations, is that they will scream until they are blue in the face on how immoral or unethical security contractors are, and yet they will contract the services of our industry so they can do their thing in countries like Africa, or in wars like Iraq and Afghanistan. Pure hypocrisy, and when you couple that, with this article written below, you start to realize that this is an industry that needs some attention. –Matt

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Haiti aid agency accused of rivalry tactics

By Andrew Jack in New York and David Blair and Benedict Mander in Port-au-Prince

The Financial Times

January 22 2010

A prominent British medical journal, The Lancet, has accused aid agencies operating in earthquake-ravaged Haiti of using “unsavoury” corporate tactics as they compete with each other to attract funding during a chaotic relief effort.

More than 500 relief agencies are operating in Haiti and the skies are filled with aircraft ferrying supplies to Port-au-Prince.

With 150 arrivals at the airport every day, immense quantities of material are piling up in hangars or on the taxi-ways.

But while flying supplies in to the stricken city has become relatively easy, getting them out to people is more challenging, a week and a half after the magnitude 7.0 earthquake that killed an estimated 75,000 people.

In an editorial published on its website on Friday, The Lancet said the situation in Haiti remained “chaotic, devastating and anything but co-ordinated”. It accused agencies of “jostling for position” and needless competition for funds.

“Polluted by the internal power politics and the unsavoury characteristics seen in many big corporations, large aid agencies can be obsessed with raising money through their own appeal efforts,” The Lancet wrote.

One logistics specialist handling airport arrivals for Haiti said: “You should see the circus that has come to town.”

Aid workers in Haiti deny any suggestion of rivalry. “To say that there is something of a bad feeling among us is totally false – period,” said Louis Belanger, a spokesman for Oxfam. “This is a massive disaster and it takes time.”

Meanwhile, an 84-year-old woman was pulled alive by rescuers from under a wrecked building in Port-au-Prince yesterday, 10 days after the earthquake struck.

Story here.

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Growth of aid and the decline of humanitarianism

The Lancet

Picture the situation in Haiti: families living on top of sewage-contaminated rubbish dumps, with no reliable sources of food and water and virtually no access to health care. This scenario depicts the situation in Haiti before the earthquake that catapulted this impoverished and conflict-ridden country into the international headlines. Now the latest target of humanitarian relief, international organisations, national governments, and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are rightly mobilising, but also jostling for position, each claiming that they are doing the most for earthquake survivors. Some agencies even claim that they are “spearheading” the relief effort. In fact, as we only too clearly see, the situation in Haiti is chaotic, devastating, and anything but coordinated.

(more…)

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Al Qaeda: Al Qaeda Linked To Rogue Aviation Network

   I posted an article about this awhile back, but it was not as comprehensive as this report.  This is pure narco-terrorism, and should definitely cause alarm. Eeben wrote an excellent post about narco-terrorism, and I think this article is a good supplement to what he was talking about. –Matt

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Al Qaeda linked to rogue aviation network

By Tim Gaynor and Tiemoko Diallo Tim Gaynor And Tiemoko Diallo

Wed Jan 13, 2010

TIMBUKTU, Mali (Reuters) – In early 2008, an official at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security sent a report to his superiors detailing what he called “the most significant development in the criminal exploitation of aircraft since 9/11.”

The document warned that a growing fleet of rogue jet aircraft was regularly crisscrossing the Atlantic Ocean. On one end of the air route, it said, are cocaine-producing areas in the Andes controlled by the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. On the other are some of West Africa’s most unstable countries.

The report, a copy of which was obtained by Reuters, was ignored, and the problem has since escalated into what security officials in several countries describe as a global security threat.

The clandestine fleet has grown to include twin-engine turboprops, executive jets and retired Boeing 727s that are flying multi-ton loads of cocaine and possibly weapons to an area in Africa where factions of al Qaeda are believed to be facilitating the smuggling of drugs to Europe, the officials say.

(more…)

Friday, November 27, 2009

Call to Action: ISS Call for Abstracts for a Monograph–The Involvement of the Private Security and Military Companies in Peacekeeping Missions

   Hey guys and gals, this is pretty cool.  I know a few reading this are pretty up on their Africa/PMC history, and this is a great way to show your knowledge of said subject by helping these guys out. The reason I have made this a Call to Action, is because these guys are wishing to enhance the understanding of what it is we do, and can do in Africa. It is just another way to fill that void of information that I keep talking about. –Matt

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Call for Abstracts

ISS Monograph

The Involvement of the Private Security and Military Companies in Peacekeeping Missions

The Institute for Security Studies (ISS) through the Security Sector Governance (SSG) Programme initiated a project on 3 November 2008 on “The Involvement of the Private Security Sector in African Conflicts, Peacekeeping Missions and Humanitarian Assistance Operations”. The project seeks to investigate the involvement of the private security sector in African conflicts, peacekeeping missions and humanitarian assistance operations to inform the development and application of appropriate norms and standards, including the revision of the 1977 OAU Convention on the Elimination of Mercenaries in Africa.

This is a call for abstracts for a Monograph titled The Involvement of the Private Security and Military Companies in Peacekeeping Missions. The main objective for this monograph is to enhance an informed understanding of the role of the private military and security companies in Africa’s peacekeeping missions. Its main focus is to critically explore the trend(s) in the outsourcing of core and non-core military functions as well as the increased role of the private sector particularly in UN and AU peacekeeping missions in Africa.

Abstracts for the Monograph chapters may be submitted to Mr Sabelo Gumedze at sgumedze@issafrica.org by December 11, 2009.  They must include the following details:

1. Title of the proposed paper.

2. Name of the author, organization to which he or she belongs and email address.

3. If there are several authors, please give the particulars of each of them.

Abstracts should average between 500 and 1,000 words.

Authors of accepted abstracts will be notified by December 18, 2009 regarding acceptance of abstracts and will have to submit the definite text of paper. Accepted papers should average between 5, 000 and 10, 000 words and must be submitted by March 31, 2010. Early submission of articles is strongly encouraged. Authors should as far as possible adopt the ISS style guideline.

If you have any queries regarding the submission of abstracts and papers, please contact Mr Sabelo Gumedze at sgumedze@issafrica.org

Link to add here.

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