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Congo-Kinshasa: A Small Step Towards Peace in the East


UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
 

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UN Integrated Regional Information Networks

ANALYSIS
5 June 2008
Posted to the web 5 June 2008

Kisangani

A disarmament pledge by two minor Rwandan Hutu rebel groups in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is a welcome, if small, step to restoring peace in the devastated region, according to the government and analysts.

Rwandan insurgents are one of the key elements in a complex web of armed groups in a region where violence, especially sexual violence against women, is still widespread five years after the official end of DRC's last civil war. Well over a million people in eastern DRC are internally displaced and most depend on assistance from humanitarian agencies.

Under the 'roadmap for disarmament', unveiled in the city of Kisangani on 26 May, the Ralliement pour l'unité et la democratié (RUD) and the Rassemblement populaire rwandais (RPR) agreed to gather at two sites and start handing over their weapons. In return, they want their security to be guaranteed, the UN mission in DRC, MONUC, to oversee the process, and the DRC government not to forcibly repatriate them to Rwanda.

"I think since we are offering to disarm and to be relocated, the international community will aid in convincing the Rwandan government that it is essential that there is a political framework; a framework is simply inter-Rwandan dialogue to ensure the fighters [in DRC] feel safe to go home," RUD spokesman Augustin Dukuze told IRIN.

The Rwandan government, however, has long refused to talk to those it holds responsible for the 1994 genocide. President Paul Kagame twice sent troops into eastern DRC to try to neutralise the so-called 'génocidaires'.

The roadmap was immediately disowned by the much larger, if somewhat fragmented, Forces démocratiques pour la liberation du Rwanda (FDLR), which boasts around 7,000 fighters, compared to RUD and RPR's estimated 400.

"Whatever happened in Kisangani does not concern us because we were not present," said FDLR spokesman Ignace Murwanashyaka.

Long road ahead

Nevertheless, for Anneke van Woudenberg, a senior researcher on DRC for Human Rights Watch, the agreement left room for optimism.

"The Kisangani meeting was a step in the right direction by encouraging some Rwandan armed groups in Congo to disarm and resettle in Rwanda or elsewhere, but we are far from reaching the end of the road," she told IRIN.

"It's the FDLR who pose a serious problem for peace in eastern Congo and the safety and security of its citizens. Their failure to participate was disappointing," said Woudenberg, adding, however, that armed action against the group should only be used once all other means had been exhausted.

In November 2007 in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, the DRC and Rwandan governments renewed their commitment to dealing with such armed groups in an agreement that provided for the use of military action if efforts towards voluntary disarmament failed.

"As part of these non-violent options, diplomats must remind the Congolese government that they must stop any financial or military support given to FDLR combatants, either directly or indirectly, through other groups ... They must also urge Rwandan authorities to take concrete steps towards providing an environment that would encourage the voluntary return of FDLR combatants," added Woudenberg.

David Mugnier, Central Africa Project Director for the International Crisis Group, was also encouraged by the roadmap, despite the small size of the groups involved, saying it could finally "kick start the process of disarmament, repatriation or relocation", not least because the process is backed by the DRC government, civil society in the Kivu provinces and most of the international community.

"Whether or not these two groups will effectively regroup and disarm is a bit too early to say but [...] the process seems to be on track and this could create an incentive for other combatants to join it," Mugnier told IRIN.

But the process is not without risks, he added. "It cannot be excluded that the FDLR could rapidly take control of the areas vacated by RUD and RPR. For the moment the capacity of MONUC and the [DRC military] to challenge them is limited."

Renewed efforts

MONUC spokesman, Kemal Saiki, told IRIN that representatives of "certain branches of the FDLR" had actually been present during the Kisangani talks, even if the group proper had distanced itself from the roadmap.

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"So I don't think it will be long before discussions take place. [But] there is a principle that is not negotiable and that is the departure or the temporary relocation [of the armed Rwandan Hutu groups in eastern DRC]", he said.

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Read comments. Write your own.
Author: aambamakyemaaya

I NEVER UNDERSTAND WHY FDLRMAI-MAI WHEN NKUNDA IS THERE TRY TO MIX UP THINGS ALL ATTACKS ARE FROM NKUNDA BECAUSE HE IS THE ONE WHO DOES OPPOSE ALL NEGOTIATIONS ,HE HATES KINSHASA GONERNMENT,WHILE INTERNATIONAL ,NKUNDA AND RWANDA SAY FDLR MAI-MAI WORK T, AND HELP FARDC TO FIGHT NKUNDA HOW COME TODAY FDLR AND THE MAI-MAI CAN GO AND START ATTACKINF FARDC POSITINS ,THIS IS LIES ,NKUNDA HE IS THE MAN WHO IS ATTACKING THE FADRC AND POPULATION ,ALL OF THAT TO BLAME MAI-MAI AND FDLR BECAUSE THOSE TWO GROUPS ALWAYS P^REVENT NKUNDA AND RWANDA TO PROGRESS WITH THEIR PLAN ,SO... [Read Full Text]


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