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Nouvelles en bref

RDC: Une centaine de morts lors de la mutinerie de militaires à Katchanga.

Xinhua

25/05/12

 

KINSHASA - La mutinerie de militaires des Forces armées de la RDC (FARDC) à Katchanga, dans le territoire de Masisi (Nord-Kivu), aurait causé une centaine de morts."Aux dernières nouvelles, l'on apprend qu'environ 100 personnes ont été tuées lors de ces pillages des éléments de FARDC à Katchanga. Il y a aussi une cinquantaine de blessés et des femmes violées", a affirmé M. Thomas Kabuya, un responsable de la société civile du Nord-Kivu.

 

 
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.

 
Congo militia leader holds firm. Print

By Scott Baldauf
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

12/02/07

 

nkunda.gif(AXcess News) Kitchanga, Democratic Republic of CONGO - The general walks into the hut, his boots freshly brushed, his green beret tilted just so, his silver-capped swagger stick tucked under his arm. He greets a group of journalists, puts his hand over a table full of food, and closes his eyes in prayer.

"Father, we thank you for the food we are about to eat, and we ask you to ensure a safe journey for your children who have come to visit us," Gen. Laurent Nkunda intones, in the rhythm of an evangelical preacher, which he has been in the past.

It's not the picture one expects of Congo's Public Enemy No. 1.

Called a war criminal and terrorist by his opponents in the Congolese Army, General Nkunda maintains a well-armed and -supplied militia of 8,000 in the mountainous eastern region of Congo, carrying out a guerrilla war against the government and other ethnic militias in defense of his ethnic group, Congolese Tutsis.

"We are asking government to take a position against the negative forces, so we can get peace," said Nkunda at a recent press conference held in his headquarters in the town of Kitchanga. His enemy is not the Congolese army, he insists, but rather the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a militia of ethnic Hutus who have taken refuge in Congo since carrying out the 1994 genocide that killed more than 800,000 Tutsis. "It's a threat, and not just to us but to the people of Congo. They have an ideology of genocide, and they did genocide in Rwanda, and they want to do it in Congo."

Bad time for a rebellion

Nkunda's rebellion couldn't have come at a worse time for the war-torn nation, a massive sprawling country of 250 ethnic groups bound together by the Congo River. The newly elected government of President Joseph Kabila is just now learning the ropes of government. Aid workers were about to help move 700,000 displaced people back to their villages and begin reconstruction of the country. And foreign investors were just beginning to help Congo extract its almost unlimited mineral riches. Renewed fighting puts all that at risk.

Yet, while President Kabila recently signaled his frustration, announcing on TV that "the time for carrots is over," the solution of this conflict will not easily be won by battle.

"There should be a political solution in eastern DRC, because there is no military solution," says retired Maj. Gen. Patrick Cammaert, former commander of UN peacekeepers in Congo.

No easy solutions

Speaking of the Congolese army, General Cammaert says, "The FARDC is in no position to carry out combat operations." And simply removing Nkunda as a charismatic leader won't solve the problem either, Cammaert adds. "You still have the problem of a minority that is ignored, and nobody is taking care of their needs. Nkunda says, 'I'll take care of it, because the government isn't taking care of it.' "

Just months ago, the problem of reintegrating Congo's many militias seemed to be improving. President Kabila pushed a program of brassage, in which militias would send troops to join an army led by commanders of all ethnic groups.

But the continued presence of rebel groups from outside Congo, including the Hutu FDLR, made many ethnic groups uneasy. When three Tutsi businessmen were murdered in December, Nkunda, himself a Tutsi, withdrew the 6,000 fighters he had sent for reintegration, and returned to the jungle to force the government to expel the FDLR before continuing demobilization.

The crisis has escalated in recent weeks during whigh fighting between Nkunda's men and government forces displaced 65,000 civilians .

Nkunda's demand to allow a Tutsi army to protect Tutsis is "impossible," says Sylvie Van den Wildenberg, a spokeswoman for the UN peacekeeping mission in Congo, MONUC. "If we allow every soldier to defend his own people, we'll have 250 tribal armies."

During the current cease-fire negotiated by MONUC on Sept. 2, Nkunda has used the media to put forth his demands, a move that has roiled the Congolese government. A recent press trip into Nkunda territory, joined by this reporter, was met by lengthy detention, interrogation, and harassment by Congolese police, army, and army intelligence. "Nkunda is using the media for propaganda," one army intelligence commander fumed during a lengthy interrogation, in which the reporter's camera and recorder were confiscated (and later returned). "Nkunda is not a hero. He is a criminal. He is a terrorist."

In Kitchanga, Nkunda creates a very different impression. "I've known him since my childhood until now," says Katabana Mateene, a local chief who is not a Tutsi. "Since Nkunda came, my village is safe. Without him, we would have a very bad situation here."

Still, whatever the merits of his cause, UN officials say Nkunda's mobilization is not helpful.

"Nkunda says he should not be compared with the FDLR and I know what he means, because of what the Tutsi community suffered from the FDLR," says Ms. Van den Wildenberg, of the MONUC. "But the effect of his policies in the region are just as bad as any negative forces operating on Congolese soil."

 

AXcess News

 

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





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