McPhilemy is the author of The Committee: Political Assassination in Northern Ireland, which documents collusion between prominent citizens in the Protestant community in Northern Ireland and the Royal Ulster Constabulary, in the murder of Catholics and Republican paramilitaries.
The Right Reverend Onono-Onweng is president of the Religious Leaders’ Initiative for Peace, and Bishop of the Diocese of Northern Uganda in Gulu of the Anglican Church of Uganda.
Matthew Odong is the Monsignor of the Diocese of Gulu of the Roman Catholic Church, and the secretary of the Religious Leaders’ Peace Initiative.
by Linda de Hoyos
Religious, community, and political leaders from the war-torn districts of Kitgum and Gulu and from the large Acholi exile community met in London, to take action to bring peace to their land.
A presentation by George Odwong, Resident District Commissioner of Kitgum District.
An interview with Nelson Onono-Onweng.
An interview with Matthew Odong.
by John Hoefle
The case of the Bank of New England.
by Rainer Apel
IMF policies will cause new floods.
What the bankers wish to ignore.
by Marcia Merry Baker
“Bring in the undertaker,” was Lyndon LaRouche’s advice in February 1997. The IMF, known to be insolvent, known to perpetrate disasters, suffering, and failures, nevertheless still walks and talks in capital cities around the world. But, opposition to it is growing.
Commentaries on the IMF and the global financial crisis.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr., surveying the current world crisis, addresses the question, “What powerful agency has done this to us?” Look to the wartime development of the British- American-Canadian establishment, and its emergence after the war. Look, too, at the BAC’s manipulation of the poor, typical American populist, who obviously has not the slightest inkling of the threat posed to him by the oligarchy. “The populist does not recognize, that the oligarch’s essential weapon against the poor populist is the populist’s acceptance, like the Sancho Panza of Miguel Cervantes’ Don Quixote, of that kind of stupefaction which is all too popular among populists.”
by Jeffrey Steinberg and Scott Thompson
Conrad Black, the man whose media empire has been leading the British assault against the U.S. Presidency, is calling for a revival of Winston Churchill’s World War II alliance among Britain, Canada, and the United States.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
The Crown Prosecution Service stated that there is no evidence to substantiate charges against Mohamed Al Fayed by the British Crown’s scoundrel Tiny Rowland. Rowland, according to one source, thereupon “lost the will to live.”
A report on the annual “summer school” of the European Labor Committees and the Schiller Institute.
by Claudio Celani
by Umberto Pascali
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
by Gretchen Small
A report on an EIR seminar in Bogota´ on “The Peace Process in Peru and Colombia.”
by Maximiliano Londoño
by Gen. Harold Bedoya Pizarro (ret.)
by Gretchen Small
by Edward Spannaus
Independent counsel Kenneth Starr’s subpoena to a President to testify against himself, was unprecedented and unconstitutional. The British-initiated assault on the Presidency has accelerated to breakneck speed, because of the accelerating global financial crisis.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
The Citizens Protection Act of 1998 is about to be considered by the House of Representatives, and the permanent bureaucracy in the Justice Department is hysterical.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
The case of Russell Eugene Weston, Jr., the man who killed two Capitol Police officers, has parallels to that of John Hinckley, who shot President Reagan. Were they both “Manchurian candidates”?
by Carl Osgood