TESTIMONY OF FORMER CONGRESSMAN WALTER FAUNTROY
By Valencia Mohammed
September 15, 2011
Walter Fauntroy, legendary champion of human rights, was elected
in 1970 as the first member of Congress representing the District of Columbia.
A founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus in 1977, in 1984 he,
Randall Robinson and Dr. Mary Francis Berry launched the Free South Africa Movement
with their arrest at the South African Embassy in Washington, D.C.
He retired from Congress in 1990, returning to New Bethel
Baptist Church, where he had grown up, as full time pastor and becoming
president of the National Black Leadership Roundtable and the Global Campaign
for Middle East Peace.
While in Tripoli, he told the U.K. Telegraph,
“I came here over a week ago now and have been working on a long term effort to rally the genuine spiritual leaders of the world ... to work out a peace agreement.”
Special to the AFRO
Former U.S. Congressman
Walter Fauntroy, who recently returned from a self-sanctioned peace mission to
Libya, said he went into hiding for about a month in Libya after witnessing
horrifying events in Libya’s bloody civil war ~ a war that Fauntroy claims is
backed by European forces.
Fauntroy’s sudden
disappearance prompted rumors and news reports that he had been killed.
In an interview inside
his Northwest D.C. home last week, the noted civil rights leader told the Afro
that he watched French and Danish troops storm small villages late at night
beheading, maiming and killing rebels and loyalists to show them who was in
control.
“‘What the hell’ I’m thinking to myself. I’m getting out of here. So I went in hiding,” Fauntroy said.
The rebels told Fauntroy
they had been told by the European forces to stay inside. According to
Fauntroy, the European forces would tell the rebels, “‘Look at what you did.’
In other words, the French and Danish were ordering the bombings and killings,
and giving credit to the rebels.
Fauntroy watched French and Danish troops storm small villages late at night beheading, maiming and killing rebels and loyalists to show them who was in control.
“The truth about all this
will come out later,” Fauntroy said.
While in Libya, the
former congressman also said he sat down with Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi for
a one-on-one conversation. Qaddafi has ruled Libya since 1969, when he seized
power in a military coup.
Fauntroy said he spoke
with Qaddafi in person and that Qaddafi assured him that if he survived these
attacks, the mission to unite African countries would continue.
The French and Danish were ordering the bombings and killings, and giving credit to the rebels.
“Contrary to what is being reported in the press, from what I heard and observed, more than 90 percent of the Libyan people love Qaddafi,”
Fauntroy said.
“We believe the true
mission of the attacks on Qaddafi is to prevent all efforts by African leaders
to stop the recolonization of Africa.”
Several months ago,
Qaddafi’s leadership faced its biggest challenge. In February, a radical
protest movement called the Arab Spring spread across Libya. When Qaddafi
responded by dispatching military and plainclothes paramilitary to the streets
to attack demonstrators, it turned into a civil war with the assistance of NATO
and the United Nations.
Fauntroy’s account could
not be immediately verified by the Afro, and the U.S. State Department has not
substantiated Fauntroy’s version of events. Fauntroy was not acting as an
official representative of the U.S. in Libya. He returned to Washington, D.C.,
on Aug. 31.
We believe the true mission of the attacks on Qaddafi is to prevent all efforts by African leaders to stop the recolonization of Africa.
When rumors spread about
Fauntroy being killed, he went underground, he told the Afro in an interview.
Fauntroy said for more than a month he decided not to contact his family but to
continue the mission to speak with African spiritual leaders about a movement
to unify Africa despite the Arab uprisings.
“I’m still here,”
Fauntroy said, pointing to several parts of his body. “I’ve got all my fingers
and toes. I’m extremely lucky to be here.”
After blogs and rumors
reported Fauntroy had been killed, the congressional office of Delegate Eleanor
Holmes Norton, D-D.C., announced on Aug. 24 that she had been in touch with
authorities who confirmed Fauntroy was safely in the care of the International
Committee of the Red Cross.
Inside his home, Fauntroy
pulled out several memoirs and notebooks to explain why he traveled to Libya at
a time when it was going through civil unrest.
.
Libyan "rebels" fire
their weapons into the air. ~ Photo: Francisco Leong, AFP
“This recent trip to Libya was part of a continuous mission that started under Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. when he gave me orders to join four African countries on the continent with four in the African Diaspora to restore the continent to its pre-colonial status,” Fauntroy said.
“We want Africa to be the breadbasket of the world,” he said. “Currently, all the major roads in every country throughout Africa lead to ports that take its natural resources and wealth outside the continent to be sold to the European markets.”
Valencia Mohammed is a reporter for
the Afro-American, the historic Black newspaper in Washington, D.C., where this story first appeared, on Sept. 7, and founder of
Mothers of Unsolved Murders.
When this story was reposted on Mathaba.net on Sept. 9, the following was added:
Meanwhile reports from Tripoli are
coming in.
It seems in the last two weeks,
rebel fighters have fired more bullets into the air to express their excitement
than were shot during the assault on Tripoli earlier in August. But away from
“jubilant” crowds, we meet those who are not so pleased.
Abdulrakham lives in Tripoli’s Abu
Slim district, which has historically been pro-Gaddafi. When the rebels
arrived, his sister was badly injured. She is still in hospital in Tunisia.
Abdulrakham does not want to show
his face on camera and insists on a hidden location for the interview. He says
the revolution has brought much fear in its wake.
“There is no peace. There is no safety in the city. We do not let our children outside when it’s dark. We are afraid. We always wait for something bad,” he tells RT. “When Gaddafi was here, at least we didn’t have to sleep awake, like we do now.”
Abdulrakham says he also wanted
change and a brighter future for his country, but not this way.
“People are dying on both sides,” he
continues. “The city’s been destroyed ~ and no one cares! Do they seriously
think they changed it for the better? Don’t lie to yourself ~ just look around!
Is this what you wanted?”
And what is around is a scene of
widespread destruction and social chaos. The badly damaged buildings matched by
the rising stench of garbage and decomposing bodies. Armed youngsters roam the
streets, barely old enough to understand that what they carry are weapons, not
toys.
Many shops, schools and hospitals
are closed, while the city’s cemeteries are growing bigger.
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