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Nouvelles en bref

RDC: Une initiative délibérée du gouvernement continue à faire des victimes inutiles.

VirungaNews

23/05/12

 

personnes_deplacees.jpgLes contres vérités sur la situation militaire dans le territoire de Rutshuru, en province du Nord-Kivu se trouvent loin de convaincre ceux qui observent méticuleusement l’évolution de la situation sur terrain. En effet Kinshasa qui prétend mener son offensive pour capturer le général Bosco Ntaganda semble le chercher en sens inverse pendant que le Wanted-Terminator se la coule douce dans sa ferme de Bunyole, située en territoire de Masisi (Nord-Kivu).  

 
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. 

 
Denard, infamous mercenary and self-styled 'pirate', dies at 78. Print

By Jamey Keaten

15/10/07

 

bob_denard.jpgBob Denard, a colorful and well-known French mercenary who staged coups, battled communism, and fought for French interests and his own across postcolonial Africa and elsewhere for over three decades, has died, his sister said yesterday. He was 78.

Denard died Saturday in the Paris area, his sister, Georgette Garnier, said by phone. She declined to specify where he died or the cause of death. He had suffered from Alzheimer's disease, and was known to have had cardiovascular problems.

Denard was perhaps best known for controlling the impoverished Indian Ocean archipelago of Comoros Islands behind a figurehead leader for most of the 1980s, following a coup he led.

Denard was twice convicted in France for his role in an attempted coup in Marxist-controlled Benin in 1977, and a later short-lived coup in Comoros in 1995. He received suspended prison terms in each case.

A fervent anti-communist who worked for several dictators and monarchs, Denard was among the postcolonial French mercenaries known as "les affreux" — the horrible ones. He claimed the backing of Paris, but as a man of the shadows was never given official support.

Denard was born in southwest France in 1929, the son of a noncommissioned officer in the French colonial army. His real name was Gilbert Bourgeaud, and Bob Denard was one of about a dozen aliases that he assumed.

Garnier described Denard as a "very obliging" man "who liked to joke," and a military man who was "adored by his men" — dozens of whom were former European soldiers.

In the 1950s, Denard served in France's colonial army in French Indochina, and aided Morocco's police force before the kingdom gained independence from France. A later stint in business left him restless.

His career as a hired gun began in 1961, when he moved to the Belgian Congo which was recruiting experienced soldiers to help train government troops. From there, he sold his skills for uprisings in Nigeria, Angola and Zimbabwe, when it was white-ruled Rhodesia.

Denard served the Shah of Iran. He trained royalist troops in Yemen. He claimed he worked with British intelligence there, and with the CIA in Angola — where he once led mercenaries in by bicycle.

He suffered at least four serious injuries — one of which, in Congo, left him with a limp for the rest of his life. Another time he was grazed by a bullet on his head in Angola, but remained undaunted, a biographer said.

"He believed in what he was doing," said Pierre Lunel, author of the 1992 biography "Bob Denard, Le Roi de Fortune" (Bob Denard, King of Fortune).

"He did a job, and of course there were casualties," said Lunel. "It was a time that doesn't resemble today at all. The planet was split between two worlds: The communist world and free world in the West."

For years, Denard benefited from an interventionist French policy in its former colonies, and played on the Cold War chessboard — though he never got any official show of support.

A year after the failed Benin coup, Denard struck again — this time, successfully — with a putsch in Comoros that brought in Ahmed Abdallah Abderrahmane as president. Denard, as leader of the national guard, held true power until Abdallah was shot and killed in a dispute with Denard's men in November 1989.

While there, Denard claimed to have converted to Islam — the islands' predominant religion — and lived lavishly. He built a luxurious farm of 1,800 acres and married a Comoran hotel receptionist as his sixth and last wife. He had eight children in all.

After several weeks of turmoil, the French military sent in 3,000 men to seize control from Denard and his men. He fled to South Africa, where he lived for three years.

Denard was convicted in 1993 for the failed Benin coup, and settled with his family in France. He was believed to have put his adventures behind him.

But two years later, he and about 30 French mercenaries stormed ashore in Comoros to overthrow President Said Djohar after an overnight raid.

A week later, French troops, acting in the name of a bilateral defence accord between France and Comoros, liberated Djohar and took the mercenaries captive. A Paris court convicted him for that coup last year.

 

 

Associated Press

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





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