Fighting in the Eastern Congo / M23 Rebels

(Roll up sleeves, and cracks knuckles)
Guess we have our work cut out for us.

This is going to take a mix of diplomacy and superior firepower to sort out.
Some groups will probably settle peacefully after seeing what happened to M23, while other's will need to be hammered into submission.
The main thing needed on the ground now is intelligence. Hopefully we have that available to us.

I've worked with Congolese expats. Some incredible people who love their country, but had to come here for a better future.
I hope for their sakes they can go home one day.
 
DR Congo Rebels surrender to Uganda

Democratic Republic of Congo's M23 guerrillas, including rebel chief Sultani Makenga, have surrendered en masse in Uganda, officers said Thursday, signalling the end of an 18-month insurgency.

The rebel surrender follows a crushing defeat at the hands of the UN-backed Congolese armed forces.

"He is with our forces, yes, Makenga has crossed into Uganda," a senior Ugandan military officer told AFP, although he declined to clarify if he had formally surrendered or was under arrest.

Paddy Ankunda, a colonel in the Ugandan army, told AFP that 1,500 men from the M23 -- a number thought to account for more or less the entire force -- had crossed into Uganda and given themselves up.

"About 1,500 fighters surrendered today," said Ankunda, who is spokesman for Defence Minister Crispus Kiyonga, the mediator in stalled peace talks between M23 and Kinshasa. However, Ankunda said he was "not aware" if Makenga was among those to have surrendered.

Uganda has been accused by United Nations experts of backing the M23, claims Kampala has strongly denied.

The rebels' surrender puts paid to fears that they might try to fight on despite having been outweighed by superior firepower, notably helicopter gunships.

Makenga, 39, a former colonel in the DR Congo army, is accused of masterminding killings, abductions, using rape as a weapon of war and recruiting child soldiers, and is on both UN and US sanctions lists.

Congolese troops backed by a special UN intervention brigade with an offensive mandate launched a major assault late last month against the M23 force of army mutineers in turbulent North Kivu.

The region is rich in natural resources, especially gold, coltan and tin, which have been fought over by a range of armed groups for the past 15 years.

The Movement of March 23 (M23) was founded by ethnic Tutsi former rebels who were incorporated into the Congolese army under a 2009 peace deal but mutinied in April 2012, claiming that the pact had never been fully implemented.

After briefly seizing the regional capital and mining hub of Goma last November, the M23 entered into fresh peace talks which fell apart last month, leading the Congolese army to go on the attack in a bid to end the rebellion.

The United Nations and rights groups have accused the M23 of atrocities including rape and murder in a conflict that caused tens of thousands of refugees to flee.

Makenga was born to parents from the Masisi area north of Goma but grew up in the neighbouring Rutshuru district.

Like many of the ethnic Tutsi officers who fought alongside him, he cut his teeth in the ranks of the Rwandan Patriotic Front, now in power in neighbouring Rwanda, when it launched its rebellion in the early 1990s.

At the beginning of the second DR Congo war in August 1998, he took part in a daring airlift of Rwandan troops and their allies from Goma to Kitona in the west, which aborted after Angola intervened.

He then served as a battalion commander in the Rwandan-backed Congolese Rally for Democracy before joining Laurent Nkunda's National Congress for the Defence of the People.

Ever since he has been seen as loyal to Nkunda, who has spent the past several years under house arrest in Rwanda after he fell out with his former mentors.


Source : Sapa-AFP /sdv/hdw/th
Date : 07 Nov 2013 15:47
 
High hopes for peace deal to be signed

The Democratic Republic of Congo and defeated M23 rebels are set to sign a peace deal on Monday in what diplomats hope will be a key step in efforts to end decades of war in the Great Lakes region.

The rebels, one of many armed groups operating in the mineral-rich but impoverished east of the DR Congo, have been routed by the national army, who are backed by a 3,000-strong special United Nations intervention brigade.

Allegedly supported by neighbouring Rwanda and Uganda but seemingly abandoned by their sponsors due to international pressure, the M23 announced last week that their 18-month insurgency was over. They are expected to put this in writing in Uganda on Monday.

"Our hope is that we have a firm commitment from the M23 rebels to renounce their use of arms," said DR Congo government spokesman Lambert Mende.

The M23, a mainly ethnic-Tutsi force who mutinied from the Congolese army, have not confirmed Monday's meeting. But with no more military leverage they are seen as having little room for manoeuvre.

The agreement is expected to settle the fate of about 1,500 M23 fighters who have crossed into Uganda and are languishing in camps along the border. Uganda has refused to hand them over to the DR Congo.

Around 100 more injured rebels have crossed to Rwanda.

Mende said the rebels would be dealt with "case by case" -- with many rank-and-file fighters expected to be given the option to return to the army.

More complicated is the fate of around 100 M23 commanders. These include M23 leader Sultani Makenga, accused of participating in several massacres, mutilations, abductions and sexual violence, sometimes against children.

"The rebels, by signing, will effectively be surrendering. From our side, even though we have won and triumphed, we will still respect what is on the table," said Francois Muamba, a DR Congo delegate to the talks.

The UN's special envoy to the Great Lakes, Mary Robinson, told AFP the accord would be "a very important step for peace".

Speaking to AFP on Sunday, she said the deal will also be followed by operations to neutralise other rebel groups in a concerted effort to end one of Africa's most brutal and longest-running wars.

This would be "new and welcome news for the people... who have tolerated or have had to endure for far too long these armed groups, with the raping and re-raping, with the displacement of people," she said.

"It has been intolerable, and now there really is hope," said the former Irish president.

But even if a deal is signed, stabilising eastern DR Congo will not be easy. Previous peace deals for the region -- including with the M23 --have foundered because they were not implemented or did not address underlying problems such as refugees and land ownership.

Robinson said she believed Rwandan President Paul Kagame and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni -- who deny backing the M23 -- were committed to an 11-nation regional peace agreement signed in February.

She said the priority would now shift to defeating the DR Congo-based Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a descendant of Hutu extremist groups that carried out the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.

The Congolese government has already vowed a new campaign to eradicate the group.

Rwanda's minority Tutsi-led government views the FDLR as a major security threat, and dealing with the group is seen as crucial to addressing the neighbouring country's concerns and preventing the emergence of yet another Rwandan-backed proxy.

But not everyone in the DR Congo is convinced.

A group of Congolese NGOs and civil society groups last week dismissed the peace negotiations as "nonsense", denounced the impending "integration of criminals and foreigners" back into the army and called Uganda an "aggressor".

A researcher for the Enough Project, a US group campaigning against war crimes, said Rwandan and Ugandan meddling could still scupper a deal.

"It must be noted that Museveni does not hide his feelings for the M23 when he demands a general amnesty and their unconditional reintegration," Fidel Bafilemba said.

"The fact that Uganda says it won't extradite the rebels leads one to think there could be a plan B to rebuild the rebels."


Source : Sapa-AFP /mjs
Date : 11 Nov 2013 04:06
 
DR CONGO'S M23 REBELS WARN OF NEW CONFLICT RISK

The leader of the Democratic Republic of Congo's defeated M23 rebels has warned of the possibility of renewed conflict, signalling mounting frustrations among the group's confined-to-camp fighters.

The rebels' 18-month war, during in which they briefly seized the key town of Goma, capital of mineral rich North Kivu province, was brought to an end a year ago by government troops and UN peacekeepers, with fighters fleeing into neighbouring Uganda and Rwanda.

According to the Ugandan army, close to 1,300 rebels -- the bulk of their surviving fighting force -- signed papers in May vowing not to fight again in return for a possible amnesty, but M23 president Bertrand Bisimwa said that if Kinshasa did not fulfil its side of the deal, he could not "give guarantees for what will happen tomorrow."

"The main causes of this conflict should be dealt with, the causes remain. Today, the security situation in the country has completely deteriorated," he told AFP in an interview in the Ugandan capital Kampala.

"Negative forces continue to plunder the east," he said, complaining that no other rebel force "has been disarmed or stopped."

"They continue to kill. The number of women raped increases each day. The question of refugees has not been resolved. The issue of national reconciliation has simply been forgotten," Bisimwa said.

While the M23 were defeated, multiple armed groups still operate in a region that has been in turmoil for the best part of the past two decades.

Much of the rebel activity consists of abuses against civilians and illegal exploitation of natural resources, be it metals, ivory or timber.

Bisimwa accused Kinshasa of reneging on its side of a deal, including the release of M23 fighters from prisons in DR Congo -- and that this meant M23 fighters in camps in Uganda were fearful of returning to reestablish the group as a mainstream political party.

Kinshasa has so far given an amnesty to some 300 M23 rebels. An M23 delegation had been due in the city for talks on Friday, but reportedly did not turn up -- and the group has already been accused of missing several meetings.

With their fighters disarmed and held under guard in camps in Uganda and Rwanda the M23 now hold little if any influence on the ground. The M23 chief, however, implicitly warned his men would fight again should agreements fail.

"When we took up arms, it was when we were forced to do so because to not take up arms would have meant dying. When our people are killed, out of view of the cameras, when our women are raped and our possessions looted, what do you expect us to do? And those that were doing it did so either with the knowledge of the government or its army. What should we have done?" he said.

"We cannot give guarantees of what will happen tomorrow. If the government does not respect its commitments, we regret to tell you that nobody will force us to respect ours," Bisimwa said.

The United Nations and Kinshasa accused both Rwanda and Uganda of actively backing the mainly ethnic-Tutsi M23 rebellion, launched by mutinous soldiers, claims denied by both Kigali and Kampala.

DR Congo President Joseph Kabila announced the amnesty in February, to cover "acts of insurgency, acts of war and political offences."

However, more serious transgressions are excluded from the amnesty, including crimes against humanity, torture, sexual violence, child conscription and embezzlement and looting -- allegations that have been levelled at large numbers of M23 fighters by the UN.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd/th
Date : 07 Nov 2014 18:12
 
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