AFRICA/D. R. CONGO - What is needed to stop devastating cycle of violence in eastern Congo is a process of integration for Rwandan refugees, say missionaries

Tuesday, 7 July 2009

Kinshasa (Agenzia Fides)- From the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo reports continue to arrive of suffering caused to local people by gangs of armed men (see Fides 3 July 2009). The UN Organising Committee of Humanitarian Aid OCHA, says that since the beginning of this year, 800,000 people – 350,000 in North-Kivu and 450.000 in South-Kivu - have been forced to leave their homes and villages, mainly because of army operations against the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR). But also sue to attacks and violence against civilians by both the FDLR, and the Armed Forces of Congo (FARDC). With regard to the latter, troops of the 10th army region of South Kivu and those taking part in operation Kimia II blame one another for the violence. According to OCHA, because government soldiers have not been paid for weeks they will continue to harass the civilian population to meet the needs of their families.
According to the Peace for Congo Association promoted by local missionaries, which cites the local Cluster Santé Humanitarian Association in Bukavu, main city of the region of South-Kivu, in the first three months of 2009, no less than 3,424 cases of sexual violence were reported and of these 1,335 took place in medical centres.
In northern and southern Kivu the Congolese army supported by UN peacekeepers in Congo MONUC, are leading a series of military operations against the FLDR, which retaliate with violence against civilians.
According to Peace for Congo, to end this infernal cycle of violence, Hutu people in general and Rwandan refugees in DRC, including the FDLR as a movement, should no longer be labelled perpetrators of genocide. It is necessary to make a clear distinction between civilians and armed gangs, Hutu refugees in general, and the small band of men wanted by Rwandan and international justice for implication in the Rwandan genocide in 1994.
A second step could be to convince the FDLR to disarm and agree to de-localisation in other areas of the DRC identified by the Congolese government and the international community, which should guarantee assistance and security, and grant them a status of refugees. Even in this situation of diaspora, the members of the FDLR would have a chance to work with non violent means, for political change in Rwanda which, in future, could enable them to return peacefully to their own country. (L.M.) (Agenzia Fides 7/7/2009 righe 33 parole 442)


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