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Why Susan Rice Should not be US ambassador to UN

January 22, 2009
Image removed.Hello, Dearest Friends in America and all over the world,
I am starting a campaign here against the nomination of Ms. Susan Rice as the US ambassador to the United Nations.

For those of you who are not familiar with Nigeria's history, I will try to do a short story on how Ms Rice helped to thwart the democratic process in Nigeria and her role in the assasination of the Nigeria's president elect in 1998.

On June 12, 1993, Nigeria conducted the most freest, fairest and credible election since its independence from Britain in 1960. The election was annuled by the military regime and the winner of the election, Mr Moshood Kashimawo Abiola was thrown in jail.
There were lots of protests against the annulment in Nigeria and many Nigerian students lost their lives in the process. I lost a journalist colleague, whom we were both working for the same newspaper: The News in 1996. He was killed by the soldier while performing his duty as a journalist.

Susan Rice involvement:

Mr Abiola, Nigeria's President elect was to meet with American delegates led byThomas Pinkerin and Susan Rice in prison on July 7, 1998. Ironically, this was also the day he was due to be released from imprisonment.

After beign served a cup of tea by Ms Susan Rice, Abiola died of heart attack and this is not a coincident. Every Nigerians now knows the involvement of President Clinton with the Chagoury and Chagoury family, the corrupt Lebanese businessmen who control Nigeria's economy during the millitary rule.
I have attached the copy of New York Times Story which was forwarded to me by Omoyele Sowore, one of Nigeria's tireless anti-curruption fighter detailing Clintons link with the despotic millitary regime in Nigeria in 1990s.

What we can do. Please forward this to all your American friends and they will in turn petition their representatives and senators.
We do not need Susan Rice in the UN!


http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=
9A01EFD8143BF93BA15750C0A96E958260.

March 28, 1998

CLINTON IN AFRICA: THE POLICY; U.S. Stance Toward Nigeria And Its Ruler Seems to Shift
By R. W. APPLE JR.

President Clinton appeared today to signal a change in American policy toward Nigeria, Africa's most populous country.

Mr. Clinton, asked during a news conference here about his Administration's stance toward Nigeria's military ruler, Gen. Sani Abacha, said that ''if he stands for election, we hope he will stand as a civilian.'' He said he had sought advice on the matter from President Nelson Mandela of South Africa.

Previously, senior American officials said the United States would find it unacceptable if General Abacha ran as a civilian candidate in elections scheduled for August. Although Nigeria, along with its neighbors Equatorial Guinea and Gabon, supplies almost a quarter of United States petroleum imports, Mr. Clinton did not visit it on this trip as a sign of disapproval of the regime.

Asked about the remarks today, American officials said Mr. Clinton meant that if General Abacha released political prisoners, showed respect for human rights and supported a genuine transition to civil government, then the United States would not object to the general's candidacy.

Samuel R. Berger, the President's national security adviser, said this evening that what really mattered in Nigeria was ''whether there is truly an election that is free and fair.'' As things seem to be going, he added, it would be ''very difficult'' for the United states to accept the outcome of the election no matter who runs.

''The President spoke loosely, but there is no policy change,'' another White House official declared, speaking on condition of anonymity.

General Abacha seized power in 1993 after the military annulled the results of presidential elections. Many political prisoners, including the presumed winner of the 1993 races, remain in jail, although General Abacha has promised a return to democracy.

Nigerian Opposition Surprised

LAGOS, Nigeria, March 27 (Agence France-Presse) -- Nigeria's opposition coalition expressed surprise today over Mr. Clinton's statement.

''There is no justifiable cause for Washington to change its earlier position,'' said Senator Abraham Adesanya, the national president of the National Democratic Coalition.

''Abacha handing over to himself -- either as a military man or as a civilian -- is not acceptable to Nigerians,'' Mr. Adesanya said. ''It is immoral.''

__________

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/19/us/politics/w19clinton.html

December 19, 2008

In Clinton List, a Veil Is Lifted on Foundation
By PETER BAKER and CHARLIE SAVAGE

WASHINGTON — Former President Bill Clinton has collected tens of millions of dollars for his foundation over the last 10 years from governments in the Middle East, tycoons from Canada, India, Nigeria and Ukraine, and other international figures with interests in American foreign policy.

Lifting a longstanding cloak of secrecy, Mr. Clinton on Thursday released a complete list of more than 200,000 donors to his foundation as part of an agreement to douse concerns about potential conflicts if Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton is confirmed as secretary of state in the Obama administration.

The donor list offers a glimpse into the high-powered, big-dollar world in which Mr. Clinton has traveled since leaving the White House as he jetted around the globe making money for himself and raising vast sums for his ambitious philanthropic programs fighting disease, poverty and climate change. Some of the world's richest people and most famous celebrities handed over large checks to finance his presidential library and charitable activities.

With his wife now poised to take over as America's top diplomat, Mr. Clinton's fund-raising is coming under new scrutiny for relationships that could pose potential conflict-of-interest issues for Mrs. Clinton in her job. Some of her husband's biggest backers have much at stake in the policies that President-elect Barack Obama's incoming administration adopts toward their regions or business ventures.

Saudi Arabia alone gave to the foundation $10 million to $25 million, as did government aid agencies in Australia and the Dominican Republic. Brunei, Kuwait, Norway, Oman, Qatar and Taiwan each gave more than $1 million. So did the ruling family of Abu Dhabi and the Dubai Foundation, both based in the United Arab Emirates, and the Friends of Saudi Arabia, founded by a Saudi prince.

Also among the largest donors were a businessman who was close to the onetime military ruler of Nigeria, a Ukrainian tycoon who was son-in-law of that former Soviet republic's authoritarian president and a Canadian mining executive who took Mr. Clinton to Kazakhstan while trying to win lucrative uranium contracts.

In addition, the foundation accepted sizable contributions from several prominent figures from India, like a billionaire steel magnate and a politician who lobbied Mrs. Clinton this year on behalf of a civilian nuclear cooperation agreement between India and the United States, a deal that has rankled Pakistan, a key foreign policy focus of the incoming administration.

Such contributions could provoke suspicion at home and abroad among those wondering about any effect on administration policy.

Matthew Levitt, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said donations from "countries where we have particularly sensitive issues and relations" would invariably raise concerns about whether Mrs. Clinton had conflicts of interest.

"The real question," Mr. Levitt said, "is to what extent you can really separate the activities and influence of any husband and wife, and certainly a husband and wife team that is such a powerhouse."

Mr. Clinton's office said in a statement that the disclosure itself should ensure that there would be "not even the appearance of a conflict of interest."

Stephanie Cutter, a spokeswoman for Mr. Obama, said the president-elect had chosen Mrs. Clinton for his cabinet because "no one could better represent the United States."

"Past donations to the Clinton foundation," Ms. Cutter said, "have no connection to Senator Clinton's prospective tenure as secretary of state."

Republicans have addressed the issue cautiously, suggesting that they would examine it but not necessarily hold up Mrs. Clinton's confirmation as a result. Senator Richard G. Lugar of Indiana, the top Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, which will consider her nomination, was in Russia on Thursday and unavailable for comment, according to Mr. Lugar's office.

But in an interview on Nov. 30 on "This Week" on ABC, Mr. Lugar said Mr. Clinton's activities would raise legitimate questions, adding, "I don't know how, given all of our ethics standards now, anyone quite measures up to this who has such cosmic ties."

Still, he indicated that he would vote for Mrs. Clinton and praised Mr. Obama's team for doing "a good job in trying to pin down the most important elements" in its agreement with Mr. Clinton.

To avoid potential conflicts, the Obama team, represented by its transition co-chairwoman, Valerie Jarrett, signed a memorandum of understanding on Dec. 12 with the William J. Clinton Foundation, represented by its chief executive, Bruce R. Lindsey. The five-page memorandum, provided to reporters on Thursday, required Mr. Clinton to disclose his past donors by the end of the year and any future contributors once a year.

The memorandum also requires that if Mrs. Clinton is confirmed, the Clinton Global Initiative, an offshoot of the foundation, will be incorporated separately, will no longer hold events outside the United States and will refuse any further contributions from foreign governments. Other initiatives operating under the auspices of the foundation would follow new rules and consult with State Department ethics officials in certain circumstances.

Federal law does not require former presidents to reveal foundation donors, and Mr. Clinton had until now declined to do so, arguing that many who gave expected confidentiality. Other former presidents have taken money from overseas sources, including President George Bush, whose son has sat in the Oval Office for the last eight years. The elder Mr. Bush has accepted millions of dollars from Saudi, Kuwaiti and other foreign sources for his own library.

Mr. Clinton's foundation has raised $500 million since 1997, growing into a global operation with 1,100 paid staff members and volunteers in 40 countries. It said it had provided medicine to 1.4 million people living with H.I.V./AIDS, helped dozens of cities reduce heat-trapping gases and worked to spread economic opportunity.

Mr. Clinton's advocates said that the disclosure on Thursday showed he had nothing to hide and that most of his largest contributors were already known.

Yet while unprecedented, the disclosure was also limited.

The list posted on the foundation's Web site — www.clintonfoundation.org — did not provide the nationality or occupation of the donors, the dates they contributed or the precise amounts of their gifts, instead breaking down contributors by dollar ranges. Nor did the list include pledges for future donations. As a result, it is impossible to know from the list which donations were made while Mr. Clinton was still president or while Mrs. Clinton was running for president.

Many benefactors are well-known Americans, like Stephen L. Bing; Alfonso Fanjul; Bill Gates; Tom Golisano, a billionaire who ran for New York governor; Rupert Murdoch; and Barbra Streisand. Bloomberg L.P., the financial media empire founded by Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of New York, contributed, as did Freddie Mac, the mortgage company now partly blamed for the housing market collapse.

Another potentially sensitive donation came from Blackwater Training Center, part of the private security firm hired to protect American diplomats in Iraq. Five of its guards have been indicted for their roles in a 2007 shooting that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead.

The potential for appearances of conflict was illustrated by Amar Singh, a politician in India who gave $1 million to $5 million. Mr. Singh visited the United States in September to lobby for a deal allowing India to obtain civilian nuclear technology even though it never signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty. He met with Mrs. Clinton, who he said assured him that Democrats would not block the deal. Congress approved it weeks later.

Other donors have connections with India, a potential flashpoint because of tensions with Pakistan. Among them was Lakshmi Mittal, a steel magnate and, according to Forbes magazine, the fourth-richest person in the world. Mr. Mittal, who donated $1 million to $5 million, was involved in a scandal in 2002 in London, where he lives. After Mr. Mittal made a large donation to the Labor Party, Prime Minister Tony Blair helped him persuade Romania to sell him its state steel company.

Another donor [of between USD 1 and 5 million, see below] was Gilbert Chagoury, a businessman close to Gen. Sani Abacha of Nigeria, widely criticized for a brutal and corrupt rule.

Mr. Chagoury tried during the 1990s to win favor for Mr. Abacha from the Clinton administration, contributing $460,000 to a voter registration group to which Democratic officials steered him, according to news accounts. He won meetings with National Security Council officials, including Susan E. Rice, who is now Mr. Obama's choice to be ambassador to the United Nations.

Kitty Bennett, Don Van Natta Jr. and Margot Williams contributed reporting.


http://projects.nytimes.com/clinton-donors/

Clinton Foundation Donors: Search

Former President Bill Clinton released a list of thousands of donors to his charity, the William J. Clinton Foundation. The list is partial and will be updated as new data becomes available.

Donations larger than $25,000,000
-- The Children's Investment Fund Foundation
-- UNITAID

Donations from $10,000,001 to $25,000,000
-- AUSAID
-- Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
-- Stephen L. Bing
-- COPRESIDA-Secretariado Tecnico
-- Fred Eychaner
-- Frank Giustra, Chief Executive Officer, The Radcliffe Foundation
-- Tom Golisano
-- The Hunter Foundation
-- Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
-- The ELMA Foundation
-- Theodore W. Waitt

Donations from $5,000,001 to $10,000,000
-- Government of Norway
-- Nationale Postcode Loterij
-- Haim Saban and The Saban Family Foundation
-- Michael Schumacher
-- The Wasserman Foundation

Donations from $1,000,001 to $5,000,000
-- S. D. Abraham
-- Absolute Return for Kids (ARK)
-- Sheikh Mohammed H. Al-Amoudi
-- Alltel Corporation
-- Nasser Al-Rashid
-- Smith and Elizabeth Bagley
-- The Eli & Edythe Broad Foundation
-- Richard Caring
-- Gilbert R. Chagoury
-- Citi Foundation
-- Clinton Giustra Sustainable Growth Initiative - Canada
-- Victor P. Dahdaleh & The Victor Phillip Dahdaleh Charitable Foundation

 

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