
Jean Pierre
3.4K posts




#Washington: L'ancien Vice-président #AzariRuberwa a rencontré des sénateurs et des représentants américains, avec qui il a discuté du Génocide contre les Banyamulenge qui se déroule actuellement à Minembwe. Les Byanyamulenge exigent : 1. L’arrêt des bombardements par drones de la RDC à Minembwe, en RDC 2. La levée du blocus humanitaire 3. La libération des prisonniers ethniques détenus dans les prisons de Kinshasa 4. Le retrait des #FDLR de leur territoire @amluzayamo @RevColeman @Nevesbabe















Obama and Biden flew around 120,00 refugees by airplane from the Congo and resettled them across the United States as part of the US Refugee Admissions Program created by President Jimmy Carter. In 1980, Jimmy Carter signed a law to provide refugees an expedited path to US citizenship and the following benefits: —Voting. Refugees, once naturalized, have the same vote as all US citizens —Sitting on juries. Refugees, once naturalized, can judge Americans guilty or not guilty. —Serving as judges. Refugees, once naturalized, can become the final authority where you live on the meaning and application of the United States Constitution —Serving as police officers. Mayors can recruit those admitted as refugees to serve as police officers with the power to arrest Americans. —Free medical care —Free housing —Free food —Free education —Preferences in hiring and university admissions —Chain migration for their extended families








Congolese refugees march near the White House to protest, saying the US isn’t doing enough to help the Congo:






#UPDATE “These Congolese ( Banyamulenge ) refugees’ attitudes don’t align with U.S. society,” Senator Mike Lee (@BasedMikeLee) 🔥🔥🔥 Following the RWANDA-BACKED protests by Congolese ( Banyamulenge ) demonstrators in Washington, U.S. Senator Mike Lee weighed in with controversial remarks questioning refugee integration and loyalty. “Refugees coming to the U.S. should be screened for cultural ‘software incompatibility.’ Where’s the gratitude from these refugees? Where’s the loyalty to the U.S.—their adopted country?” The comments come amid growing debate in the U.S. over refugee policy, foreign advocacy, and reactions to Rwanda-backed protests linked to the situation in eastern DRC.






Today, more than 4000 Congolese from all States came to Washington DC to denounce the targeted violence, the blockade, the human rights abuse and an unprecedented humanitarian crisis in Minembwe against the banyamulenge community. Over the last several months the Congolese army and the Burundian Army have decided to wipe out the Banyamulenge from the DRC map using every means possible including starving them to death. This is unacceptable in the 21st century. It is for situations like these that the UN charter was created in 1945. The international community should not sit idle while an entire community is being extinct due to thier ethnicity. Silence and inaction are irresponsibility. Enough is Enough







