/ 10 June 2003

Gunrunning claims ‘utter rubbish’ says SA official

A senior South African official has dismissed as ”utter rubbish” claims that the country was secretly sending arms to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

It’s an irresponsible lie and we take serious exception,” Billy Masetlha, chairperson of the Third Party Verification Mechanism, said on Tuesday.

Speaking from the DRC capital of Kinshasa he said he intended taking up the matter with the Mai-Mai leader who made the allegation.

”I have asked to see him today [Tuesday] and I am going to tell him this is nonsense,” Masetlha said.

The verification mechanism was set up last year to monitor the withdrawal of foreign troops from the DRC.

Mai-Mai operational commander Lambert Kanape earlier said the arms purportedly coming from South Africa were being sent to the central Maniema province of the DRC.

He said: ”For more than a month containers painted in United Nations colours but containing heavy arms have been arriving in Kindu from South Africa via Kigali.”

Kanape added: ”Besides the containers, men in military uniform and speaking English — who might be mercenaries — are training soldiers of the RCD [the Rwanda-backed Congolese Rally for Democracy] to use these weapons.”

Masetlha said Kanape was either ”mischievous” or ”naive” about the deployment of South African troops in the area in support of the United Nation’s (UN) peacekeeping mission (Monuc) in the area.

”He should know better than anyone that we are deploying and that we are bringing in equipment,” Masetlha said.

”Mr Kanape clearly does not know what a mercenary looks like.”

South Africa had so far deployed about 1 300 soldiers in Kindu in support of UN troops.

”And we will account for every pistol and every bullet,” Masetlha said.

Kanape said the first arms deliveries came at the same time as the deployment about three weeks ago of a South African expeditionary corps in Kindu.

He accused South Africa of wanting ”a bigger and bigger” part of Monuc, and called for an international inquiry into the suspected presence of mercenaries.

Masetlha said South Africa would never become involved in the kind activities suggested by Kanape, adding ”We are not a banana republic. We will never support or train rebels. It’s all in his [Kanape’s] imagination.”

Earlier today the Democratic Alliance (DA) called on Defence Minister Mosiuoa Lekota to investigate Kanape’s allegations.

”This is a serious accusation, and given the time and effort our country has already invested in securing peace in the DRC, it is critical to investigate these claims,” DA defence spokesperson Hendrik Schmidt said in a statement.

If the reports were true, it could nullify the exemplary negotiations in the DRC facilitated by the South African government.

”The DA trusts that these claims are baseless, but it is imperative that Minister Lekota establish whether these claims are true or not.

”He must be able to assure both the South African public and the role-players in the DRC that we are not supplying arms to the DRC,” Schmidt said. – Sapa, Sapa-AFP