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Nouvelles en bref

RDC: Gen. Ntaganda is only a pawn in a wider game.

Joseph Rwagatare

07/05/12

 

When strangers wail louder than the bereaved, you must be on your guard. Something is not quite right. They are hiding something, probably some involvement in the cause of the bereavement. Or they are plotting something sinister against the grieving people or their neighbours.

The wailing is very often unnaturally loud that it must surely be contrived. Other times it is so vicious you can’t distinguish between the loud cries and baying for blood.

This seems to have been the case in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in the last several weeks.

 
RDC: Kinshasa impose une nouvelle guerre face à la revendication des mutins du Kivu.

El Memeyi Murangwa

07/05/12

makenga_sultani.jpgContrairement aux déclarations rusées du général FARDC, Didier Etumba, de suspendre les opérations militaires contre la mutinerie, Joseph Kabila est décidé à en découdre avec les mutins qui en majorité sont des ex-militaires du Congrès national pour la défense du peuple, mouvement politico-militaire qui dans un récent passé n’a cessé de donner du fil à retordre à la garde prétorienne de Kabila présentée au front comme l’armée de la république.

 
RDC: 80 nouvelles défections de soldats ex-rebelles, dont un proche de Ntaganda.

AFP

04/5/12

 

GOMA (RDCongo) - Environ 80 soldats de l'armée congolaise ont fait défection jeudi dans l'est de la RDC, dont le colonel Sultani Makenga, qui fut adjoint du général Bosco Ntaganda dans l'ex-rébellion du Congrès national pour la défense du peuple (CNDP), a-t-on appris de source militaire.

Le colonel Makenga et le lieutenant-colonel Masozera ont fait défection dans la nuit de jeudi avec leurs hommes, dans la ville de Goma, capitale de la province instable du Nord-Kivu (est) frontalière avec le Rwanda, a déclaré à l'AFP un commandant des Forces armées (FARDC).

Nous avons récupéré 80 tenues avec bottines dans le cimetière du quartier Bujovu, a indiqué cette source, qui a requis l'anonymat.

Le général Ntaganda était numéro 2 du CNDP, et le colonel Makenga était son adjoint dans cette rébellion intégrée en 2009 dans l'armée.

 
RDC: L’irresponsabilité du gouvernement central à la base de l’insécurité grandissante au Kivu.

El Memeyi Murangwa

5/03/12

fardc.jpgDe par la volonté des dirigeants irresponsables, le Kivu est entrain de vivre une situation de plus confuse engendrée par le non-paiement de la solde aux militaires et le non-respect des engagements exprimés à travers le communiqué rendu public le 16 janvier 2009 et  l’accord politique signé à Goma le 23 mars 2009. Le processus de paix semble revenir à la case départ,  et cette fois ci l’agresseur n’est autre que l’Agent payeur (Gouvernement).

Une armée chosifiée

L’armée nationale de la RDC, connue sous le diminutif «  FARDC » jadis fierté de l’Afrique Centrale se trouve être la plus misérable du continent africain.  Réduite en une bande des pilleurs et violeurs attitrés, les militaires congolais vivent sur le dos d’une population paupérisée par une classe dirigeante préoccupée plus à mener une vie ostentatoire avec les revenus de l’Etat. 

 
Congo's 'Terminator': Kabila calls for Ntaganda arrest.

BBC

4/11/12

 

bosco_ntaganda.jpgPresident Joseph Kabila has said ex-rebel leader Bosco Ntaganda, wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes, must be arrested.

But Gen Ntaganda must be tried in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the president says.  Mr Kabila had previously refused to call for the arrest of the man known locally as "The Terminator".

 
Congolese President Kabila Had Opponents Tortured, Group Says. Print

By Franz Wild

11/25/08

 

prisonniers_en_rd_congo.jpgNov. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Human Rights Watch said Congo’s President Joseph Kabila had opposition members tortured in a “lurch to authoritarian rule” after winning the nation’s first democratic elections in four decades in 2006.

“Kabila set the tone and direction” for the killing or summary execution of 500 people and often arbitrary detention of about 1,000 more, the New York-based group said in an e-mailed report today. Torture included “the use of electric batons on their genitals and other parts of their bodies, beatings, whippings, and mock executions,” it said.

Congolese Communications Minister Lambert Mende may comment on the report later today, his personal secretary, Benoit Wetshindjabi, said in a phone interview. Kudura Kasongo, Kabila’s spokesman, didn’t answer several calls to his mobile phone seeking comment.

Congo’s elections two years ago marked a key step in the central African nation’s transition to democracy after years of economic and political mismanagement, mostly under former dictator Mobutu Sese Seko. Two civil wars between 1996 and 2003 killed at least 4 million people, the majority from disease and starvation. The country, the size of Western Europe, has a population of about 62 million people.

Repression in Congo was focused on the capital, Kinshasa, and the western Bas-Congo province, where Kabila faces the strongest opposition, Human Rights Watch said. The group interviewed more than 250 people, including military and intelligence officials, between August 2006 and June 2008.

Father Assassinated

Kabila took office after his father and predecessor Laurent Kabila was assassinated in 2001. Laurent came to power in 1997 after toppling Mobutu’s three-decade-old regime with support from neighboring Rwanda. Laurent avoided a similar fate a year later with military support mainly from Angola and Zimbabwe, triggering the nation’s second civil war, the world’s deadliest war since World War II.

A 2002 peace deal brought rebel leaders into a transition government to prepare elections, which Kabila won in a second- round run-off. In March 2007, the army clashed with about 600 armed men loyal to Kabila’s main opponent, Jean-Pierre Bemba, in Kinshasa, killing at least 384 people. Bemba, who fled to exile in Portugal, claims Kabila has tried to have him killed at least three times.

Reluctant to criticize the young democracy, the international community has taken too little notice of state- sanctioned violence in Congo, Human Rights Watch said.

“Donor nations and other international actors have given little attention to the grave human rights violations of the first two years of the Kabila government,” it said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Franz Wild in Kinshasa via Johannesburg at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .

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Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved.





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