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DRC: After two key deals, what progress towards peace in North Kivu?


Photo: Nicholai Lidow/IRIN
Soldiers loyal to dissident General Laurent Nkunda man a checkpoint
KINSHASA, 14 May 2008 (IRIN) - Two agreements signed since the end of 2007 offer some hope for an end to more than a decade of violence in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), even if fighting has continued and a lasting solution has yet to be found to the presence in the region of Rwandan Hutu rebels, according to analysts.

Since the DRC government and various armed groups in the chronically unstable North Kivu province signed a ceasefire in January, the truce has been repeatedly violated and the number of displaced civilians in the province has increased.

The ceasefire was one of the highlights of an “Act of Engagement” signed on 23 January in Goma, capital of North Kivu province, where some 847,000 people are displaced.

According to the UN mission in DRC, MONUC, by the end of April 2008 there had been “a few hundred” violations of the terms of the ceasefire. Although all such incidents involved firearms, many were minor confrontations such as cattle theft.

The Act was signed by the DRC government, rebels led by renegade general Laurent Nkunda, and several dozen other armed groups of varying degrees of allegiance and hostility to the government in Kinshasa. The aim was to restore peace to both North and South Kivu, foster reconciliation between hostile groups and promote development in an area rich in natural resources.

Although there has been some progress in the provisions of the Goma deal, there has only been a reduction - rather than a halt - in fighting, while the humanitarian and human rights crisis in North Kivu has seen little or no improvement.

“The security situation has improved since the signing of the Act of Engagement,” said Caroline Draveny, head of information for North Kivu at the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). “There have been far fewer clashes, and of a lesser intensity compared to November and December 2007,” she added.


Photo: Nicholai Lidow/IRIN
Women walking along the high mountain passes of Masisi Town, North Kivu
“But reports of atrocities, sexual violence in particular, are still very alarming. This latent insecurity is still preventing displaced populations from returning home and prompts some people into displacement,” said Draveny.

Civilian displacement

More than half a million of North Kivu’s internally displaced people (IDPs) have left their homes since the start of Nkunda’s insurgency in December 2006.

Most of the latest clashes, in early May and late April, pitted government forces (FARDC) against the Forces Démocratique de la Libération du Rwanda (FDLR), a Hutu armed group of about 6,000, founded by fugitive perpetrators of Rwanda’s genocide in 1994. The presence of the FDLR in eastern DRC has been a key element of the region’s insecurity ever since. But because the FDLR is predominantly a Rwandan, rather than Congolese, group, it did not take part in the Goma conference.

Even more civilian displacement is likely in the coming weeks and months because FARDC is moving aggressively into areas held by the FDLR, which was allied to the government during the war that raged in DRC between 1997 and 2003, sucking in forces from more than half a dozen nearby states.

In November 2007, the DRC government made a fresh commitment to disarm the FDLR and send its fighters back to Rwanda, by force if necessary.

Following this agreement, signed with Rwanda in Nairobi, there has been “fighting in the areas of Ngwenda and Kinandonyi, in the north of central Rutshuru district, since 21 April”, said Draveny.

Guerrilla war

Some analysts fear military moves alone against the FDLR are destined to fail.

“FARDC has no capacity to fight the FDLR successfully and even for a well-trained and equipped army it would be difficult to fight them since they are in the bush and fight a guerrilla war,” according to Henri Boshoff of the South African Institute for Security Studies.


Photo: Arthur Asiimwe/IRIN
Gen Laurent Nkunda
“The only realistic option in dealing with the FDLR is a combination of political negotiations and economic pressure run in parallel with military pressure by FARDC/MONUC, and the continuation of the current demobilisation, disarmament, reintegration, repatriation and resettlement programme in which FDLR combatants are encouraged to voluntarily return to Rwanda,” advised Boshoff.

He says the FDLR, which has flatly rejected the Nairobi deal and had no part in its drafting, would only go back to Rwanda if there were a chance it could take part in politics there.

“The two processes [Nairobi and Goma] should run concomitantly to achieve a better result,” said Anneke van Woudenberg, a researcher with Human Rights Watch.

Rwanda’s role

Rwanda has a role to play here. Under the Nairobi Communiqué, it was supposed to give the DRC government a list of FDLR members it deemed to be “genocidaires” who should be handed over for trial. But when the list was drawn up, it named 7,000 people. Given that DRC estimates that some 30 percent of the FDLR are Congolese nationals, the list is not likely to be taken seriously.

“Rwanda is raising the stakes and refusing to see the problem resolved,” Justin Bitakwira, a national deputy who played an active part in the Goma peace conference, told IRIN.

“Given the fragility of the government, unleashing a disarmament force against the FDLR would be very audacious because the system in place has not been up to dismantling the CNDP [Comité Nationale pour la Defence du Peuple, Nkunda’s group], which is less structured than the FDLR. It is as if one did not know how to attack a rat but one dares to attack a cat,” added Bitakwira.


Photo: Eddy Isango/IRIN
IDPs in Mugunga I camp, near Goma, capital of North Kivu province
“The issue is that the CNDP might be going to integrate with the army in line with the [Goma deal] timetable, but the CNDP cannot agree to do this whilst leaving the FDLR in the bush, and the FDLR cannot agree to being disarmed as long as the CNDP is armed and operational,” Bitakwira said.

Timetable agreed

Still, there have been advances in implementing the provisions of the Goma deal. Several follow-up committees comprising representatives of the various signatories have been set up. On 21 April a timetable was agreed for components of the Act, such as the return of IDPs, sensitisation of armed groups, and their disarmament ahead of their possible integration into the national army.

But progress, according to some participants, is slow. “The return of refugees cannot be realised within 78 days as envisaged in the timetable and the entire pacification process will not have finished by this date, contrary to the schedule we adopted, because the army will not have visibly ended its operations against the FDLR,” said Kambasu Ngeve, head of the CNDP delegation.

The work of committee meetings has been hampered by power games and walkouts.

“It is a question of interests, and many armed groups see the posts in the follow-up committees as a slice of the cake, and they can no longer content themselves with sharing these posts,” added Ngeve.

“That is a pity because there are people who do not want peace in North Kivu and who are in favour of the Balkanisation of the country. Those who mine coltan and other minerals are playing at all levels to ensure this situation continues in confusion, allowing them the time to continue to do what they do,” lamented Sophie Bwiza, spokeswoman for the Patriotes résistants congolais (PARECO), a militia group formed to counter the threat from Nkunda.

Too little, too late

It was all too little, too late for 63 human rights NGOs that in late April collectively called on the United Nations and other sponsors of the Goma deal to push things forward and appoint a senior independent adviser on human rights for eastern DRC.

“Hundreds of thousands of victims clung to the hope that the peace deal would end their suffering. Sadly, no meaningful progress has been made on human rights commitments,” HRW’s Van Woudenberg said in the statement.

For DRC President Joseph Kabila, it is too soon to judge the success of the peace process. “By 30 June an evaluation will be made of what has been done after the Goma conference. It will be decided if we are on the right track … or if it is necessary to move up a gear,” he told the Belgian newspaper Le Soir.

ei/cb/am/mw


Theme(s): (IRIN) Conflict, (IRIN) Early Warning, (IRIN) Food Security, (IRIN) Governance, (IRIN) Human Rights, (IRIN) Refugees/IDPs

[ENDS]

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
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