On the 30th of June in 1960, the Republic of the Congo became independent from Belgian colonizers, beginning a four year period of civil war which killed approximately 100,000 people, including the country's first Prime Minister, Patrice Lumumba. The complex period of political strife is known as the "Congo Crisis".
The Congo had been colonized by Belgium since the late 19th century, a process initiated by King Leopold II of Belgium, who was frustrated by Belgium's lack of international power and prestige.
A nationalist movement within the Belgian Congo began to gain momentum in the 1950s, consisting of rival factions such as the Mouvement National Congolais (MNC), of which Patrice Lumumba (shown) was a leading figure, and Alliance des Bakongo (ABAKO), led by Joseph Kasa-Vubu.
Following major riots in Stanleyville and Léopoldville in 1959, a Round Table Conference in Brussels was held in January 1960, with leaders from all the major Congolese parties in attendance.
The Congolese leaders were successful in negotiating their independence to be granted within months, formally winning their independence from Belgium in late June. Within days, violence between white and black communities broke out, and the country descended into a civil war between rival political factions. Some factions, supported by powerful mining interests, began seceding from the newly founded Republic of Congo.
The United Nations sent in peacekeeping troops, which were initially welcomed by Lumumba and the central government with the idea that the UN would help suppress the secessionist states. Viewing the secessions as an internal political matter, the UN refused to use its troops to assist the central Congolese government against them.
Lumumba also sought the assistance of the U.S. government of Dwight D. Eisenhower, which refused to provide meaningful military aid. Frustrated, he turned to the Soviet Union, which agreed to provide weapons, logistical and material support, which the state promptly used against the secessionists.
Despite Lumumba's public proclamations that he was not a communist, the United States viewed the acceptance of aid with alarm, and Lumumba became a target of Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) surveillance. Lumumba was captured and, on January 17th, 1961, executed by Belgian-assisted forces.
The factional conflict continued in the wake of Lumumba's death, with fighting and intervention coming from Western states, the United Nations, and various political groups inside the Congo.
In 1964, a group known as the Simbas initiated a rebellion based on egalitarian ideals and witchcraft. In November 1964, the Simbas rounded up the remaining white population of Stanleyville, holding them hostage in the Victoria Hotel to use as bargaining tools with the Armée Nationale Congolaise (ANC).
In order to recover the hostages, Belgian parachute troops were flown to the Congo in American aircraft. More than 70 hostages and 1,000 Congolese civilians were killed in the rescue mission, but the vast majority of hostages were evacuated.
Following chaotic elections in 1964, Joseph-Désiré Mobutu took power in a military coup, assuming sweeping powers and instituting widespread political repression. Mobutu, who had played a key role in Lumumba's execution, ruled until 1997, enjoying support from the United States, France, Belgium, and Maoist China.
Here is a list of Trans rights organizations you can support :cat-trans:
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Resources for Palestine :palestine-heart:
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Foundations of Leninism :USSR:
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Anarchism and Other Essays :ancom:
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This Friday we will be watching Pink Floyd’s The Wall :wall-talk: is a 1982 British live action/adult animated surrealist musical and psychological drama film directed by Alan Parker, based on the 1979 Pink Floyd album The Wall. The screenplay was written by Pink Floyd vocalist and bassist Roger Waters. Boomtown Rats vocalist Bob Geldof plays rock star Pink, who, driven into insanity by the death of his father, constructs a physical and emotional wall to protect himself.
So a couple of winners @DickFuckarelli, @context, @buh, and @FunkyStuff. I :rat-salute: you all and love seeing your efforts in solving this quaint problems I post.
Previous answers
(A) Neither.
(B) a pound of metal is always worth more than half a pound of the same metal.
(C) Six strokes took 30 seconds, therefore 12 strokes will take 60 seconds- such is the usual train of thought. But when the clock struck six, there were only 5 intervals between strokes, and each interval was 30/5 = 6 seconds. Between the first and twelfth strokes there will be 11 intervals of 6 seconds each; therefore, 12 strokes will take 66 seconds.
(D) There is always a plane that contains any given 3 points.
The cashier's error
The customer said to the cashier: "I have 2 packages of margarine at 9 cents; 2 cakes of soap at 27 cents; and 3 packages of sugar and 6 pastries, but I don't remember the prices of the sugar and pastries."
"That will be $2.92."
The customer said: "You have made a mistake."
The cashier checked again and agreed.
How did the customer spot the error?
Like usual have fun :soviet-heart: and remember to dm @Wmill the answer.
Go check @Eco's train post https://hexbear.net/post/123147 :train
Spoilers for ds9
spoiler
Damnit ds9 stop making like ezri I'm still hurting over jadzia. But hear comes ezri all quirky and shit and it's suprisingly endearing. ___