/ 28 May 2012

UN report shows Rwandans trained to fight in DRC

Josephu Jibesho and his wife Veronica Nyiramitana sit in the doorway to their small home in the village of Gisiza on the front line of the conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo's North Kivu province.
Josephu Jibesho and his wife Veronica Nyiramitana sit in the doorway to their small home in the village of Gisiza on the front line of the conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo's North Kivu province.

“The United Nations has conducted interviews with 11 combatants who abandoned their positions in the mountainous forests on the border between the DRC and Rwanda.

“The report … describes these deserters as Rwandan citizens recruited in Rwanda on the pretext of joining the national army, including a minor,” the BBC said.

“They said they were recruited in a village called Mundede, that they received training in handling weapons and that they were sent to the DRC to join M23,” Hiroute Guebre-Selassie, bureau chief of the UN mission in the  DRC (Monusco) in Goma, the capital of Nord-Kivu province, told the BBC.

The March 23 Movement (M23) is formed of army mutineers who were part of the former rebel National Congress for the Defence of the People (CNDP), a Congolese Tutsi force that Rwanda denied supporting when it was waging its insurgency.

CNDP members were integrated into the army under peace accords signed with Kinshasa in 2009. Large numbers of mutineers defected this year, claiming bad treatment and demanding full implementation of the peace deal.

“Certain combatants stated that [the Rwandans] were recruited as of February,” according to the BBC.

‘Categorical lies’
Clashes between the DRC army and M23, which was created on May 6, are concentrated in the Rutshuru territory, north of Goma, in an area close to the border with Rwanda and Uganda.

Rwanda’s Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwabo told the BBC that the UN report was “categorical lies”.

“The UN mission in DRC is lying; they have not verified anything; they are repeating claims and rumours that we, the Rwandan government, have heard over the last many weeks,” Mushikiwabo told the Network Africa programme.

DRC troops, fighting M23 with heavy weapons, have received reinforcements from several other provinces. Given the army’s difficulty in putting down the mutiny, Prime Minister Augustin Matata Ponyo last Wednesday hinted that the ex-CNDP forces had a “rear base in a neighbouring country”, without naming one.

M23 for its part accused government forces last week of acting in close collusion with Rwandan rebels operating in DRC. – AFP