The infusion of $97,000 into the 2012 Obama re-election campaign by a Texas oil executive should not raise any eyebrows in an election cycle where the President has publicly embraced the super Pac concept. US media organizations might not flinch when the same executive happens to be a 2010 Obama appointee to the Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations (ACTPN). But since the oil magnate, Kase Lawal, is now implicated by the United Nations in a gold smuggling operation in the Democratic Republic of Congo, it might be time to dust off the neglected Congo desks and get a solid investigative reporter on the story. You have to wonder what the mainstream press would do with this information if it were linked to any of the Republican candidates, especially the donor angle.
CAMAC jet on Goma Runway Photo: Screen shot from UN Report
The Guardian first broke the damning minutiae found 150 pages into a November 2011 United Nations Security Council Committee Report on post election criminal activities in the DRC. The illicit gold trade is among the main sources of financing available to Congolese armed groups and FARDC (regular Congolese army) criminal networks.
The official White House biography lists Kase Lawal as Chairman and CEO of CAMAC International Corporation, "an integrated oil and gas company." The UN report details a plot in which Lawal's company, CAMAC International, leased a Gulfstream IV jet and sent it to the Congo for a gold smuggling operation. Included are an excerpt from a PowerPoint presentation made at a meeting in New York in December 2010, outlining the proposed gold deal for Lawal and others. If that is not enough, there are detailed cell phone records indicating that Lawal knew that the country of origin for the 475 kg of gold was the DRC.
The Group has investigated one particularly high-profile case in which Kase Lawal, Chair of the CAMAC (Cameroon-American) Group, attempted to conduct a gold transaction that subsequently involved (Bosco) Ntaganda between December 2010 and February 2011. CAMAC is an oil company based in Houston, Texas, in the United States, with offices in Lagos and Abuja, Nigeria. Financing this deal with company funds, Lawal organized it in collaboration with Carlos St. Mary, director of the diamond trading company Axiom Trading, and Dikembe Mutombo of Mutombo International Group.
Screen shot of public UN document
The profit to be gained from the deal was originally estimated at more than $10 million. Lawal agreed to finance the deal, with St. Mary conducting the business in Kenya and the two splitting profits with Mutombo, originally on a 40-30-30 basis, according to the UN report.
Worse, Lawal's group was dealing with Congolese warlord Bosco "The Terminator" Ntaganda, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes that include the killings, rapes and mutilations of men, women and children, and the forced conscription of child soldiers. In the most notorious case, Ntaganda is accused by Human Rights Watch of commanding troops that massacred 150 civilians at Kiwanja in North Kivu province in November 2008. "He also commanded troops accused of having killed at least 800 civilians on an ethnic basis in the town of Mongbwalu, in Ituri district in 2002, after his troops took control of the rich gold mines in the area," HRW says.
HRW Report on collateral damage from the gold trade
There are international sanctions against gold trade in DRC, and the United Nations specifically prohibits the financing of armed groups in DRC. Ntaganda controls the Mungwe and Fungamwaka mines, near Numbi, through the Great Lakes Mining Company.
(UN REPORT)According to St. Mary and hotel records examined by the Group, Lawal convened a meeting to initiate the gold deal in New York on 2 December 2010. There, Mutombo and three relatives, Reagan Mutombo, Stephan Kapuadi and David Kapuadi proposed the sale of gold held in Nairobi (see annex 165). Text messages obtained by the Group demonstrate Lawal's understanding that the gold was to have originated from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (see annex 166). Throughout the process, Lawal made no inquiries regarding the exact origins of or conditions in which the gold had been extracted and transported from the Democratic Republic of the Congo to Kenya.
What followed was a trail of arrests, betrayal, bribery, lies, counterfeit currency, and cliched photos of suitcases full of money at the DRC border. It is all in the UN report. Finally, the CAMAC officials under house arrest in Kinshasa were released after being detained for a month in a hotel in Goma.
Seized CAMAC cash
(UN Report) CAMAC's Kinshasa representative, Marie Elonga, officially paid $3 million in fines, and the three were finally released on 25 March. According to St. Mary, when he had travelled immediately to see Kase Lawal in London, Lawal had told him that he had lost a total of $30 million as a result of the whole ordeal, including transport fees, fines, bribes and the payments made on the gold purchase.
The Guardian reports that all efforts to reach Lawal for comment have failed.
Camac said it had no comment on the allegations, but said: "Camac is a law-abiding company and we disagree with the representations made in the report." The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
Even though CAMAC's lawyers denied any company involvement in the scheme, the UN Group of Experts has photos of the impounded corporate jet and the report says CAMAC acknowledged the release of its corporate jet on its website. CAMAC was in breach of its contract with Southlake Aviation when the Gulfstream was flown to the DRC.
Lawal is also the Vice Chairman of the Houston Airport System Development Corporation and Vice Chairman of Unity National Bank, and a member of the National Urban League Board of Directors, and a member of the United States Presidential Trade Advisory Committee on Africa during the Bush and Clinton Administrations.
According to the official government website, "The President appoints up to 45 ACTPN members for two-year terms. The 1974 Trade Act requires that membership broadly represent key economic sectors affected by trade. The committee considers trade policy issues in the context of the overall national interest."
The United Nations accusations against Lawal and CAMAC deserve a complete investigation and Congressional hearings might be a good place to begin. It is shameful to think that a United States trade commissioner is responsible for funding a notorious, murderous Congolese warlord. Who vetted Lawal's appointment? The Obama administration has accepted significant tainted campaign donations that should, at the very least, be returned.
Obama's refusal to address this issue is troubling. In recent days he has been quoted as saying he will be president for the next five years. That is the same rhetoric one hears from dictators in Central Africa and has no place in the US political arena. If the press refuses to hold him accountable for the misdeeds of his trade administration, anything is possible.
Georgianne Nienaber is an investigative environmental and political writer. She lives in rural northern Minnesota and South Florida. Her articles have appeared in The Society of Professional Journalists' Online Quill Magazine, the Huffington (more...)