Friday 23 November 2012

Museveni, Kagame order M23 rebels to Get out of Goma: Rebels say NO!!!



FIRST READ:

Chaos by Design: When aggressors become mediators: When wolves pretend to be sheep: The US supports Museveni Congo mediation: M23 rebels capture Goma as the UN looks on: Kabila and Kagame fly to Kampala for talks

http://watchmanafrica.blogspot.com/2012/11/chaos-by-design-when-aggressors-become.html

UN+UN peace keeping in Congo =American New World Order: UN security council condemns Goma takeover by M23 rebels: Rebels accused of gross human rights violations: DR soldiers surrender to M23 rebels

http://watchmanafrica.blogspot.com/2012/11/unun-peace-keeping-in-congo-american.html

 

Museveni, Kagame to M23: Get out of Goma

http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Museveni--Kagame-to--M23--Get-out-of-Goma/-/688334/1626340/-/plgngm/-/index.html

By Risdel Kasasira & Ismail Ladu

Posted  Thursday, November 22  2012 at  02:00

In Summary
Presidents issue order in a joint communique after day-long meetings with DR Congo’s President Kabila as more leaders are invited to Kampala over the crisis.
Kampala
Following hours of face-to-face talks, the presidents of Uganda, DR Congo and Rwanda yesterday said the M23 rebels must withdraw from Goma, which fell to the fighters on Tuesday.
Moments after the joint communiqué was read, Congo’s Joseph Kabila, however, refused to say whether his government would consider talks with the rebels who have indicated that they are open to talks. “There is a regional plan by ICGLR (International Conference on the Great Lakes Region) on how to engage the M23,” Mr Kabila said.
The communiqué released during a 7pm press conference at Speke Resort Munyonyo said: “A plan to end this is being communicated to them. DRC has promised to expeditiously look into the causes of this contest and address them as best as it can.”
Uganda’s Foreign Minister Sam Kuteesa read the communiqué which also said: “In solidarity with the Congolese people and their counterparts in the region, President Museveni and Kagame have made it clear that even if there were legitimate grievances by the mutineering group, they cannot accept the expansion of this war or entertain the overthrow of a legitimate government of DRC or undermine its authority”.
Assembled media, however, brought to the attention of the host president that reports were filtering in that the rebels were marching out of Goma and advancing towards Bukavu in South Kivu, even as the three leaders were putting up a show of unanimity over the crisis.
Unruffled, Museveni said: “No matter how far they have advanced we are going to ask them to withdraw. I can assure you they will go back.”
Like his Congolese counterpart, President Kagame was noncommittal in answers to questions about the border with DR Congo which was closed about three weeks ago. “This issue was discussed in the meeting and we are waiting for the final advice from ICGLR,” he said.
Mr Kagame also said: “Congolese problems must be solved by Congolese, and regional problems should be resolved by the regional initiatives.”
Meanwhile, at least 10 presidents from the Great Lakes region are expected in Kampala this Saturday to discuss the resumption of hostilities in eastern DR Congo.
Despite Presidents Museveni, Kagame and Kabila’s marathon meetings on Tuesday night and most of yesterday, ministers from ICGLR countries, who have separately been meeting in Kampala, resolved that presidents from the regional body must participate in the process.
The permanent secretary in the ministry of foreign affairs, James Mugume, yesterday said the summit was prompted by the fall of Goma. “It was decided yesterday that we have this meeting and the presidents will discuss the concept of deployment of an international neutral force and mediation between Kinshasa and the rebels,” he said.
Joining forces

The presidents on Saturday will discuss the logistics necessary for deployment of the neutral force. They are also expected to address themselves to UN Security Council approval of the deployment of the neutral force from Tanzania, Kenya, DR Congo and Angola.
The United States government also warned the in a statement. “We condemn the renewed military campaign by the M23 rebel group, which is an affront to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the DRC and in violation of international law. We call for a ceasefire, and for the M23 to return Goma to DRC authorities and pull back to their July positions,” the statement said.

US Department of State Spokesperson, Ms Victoria Nuland, called on Uganda and Rwanda to use their “influence on M23” to bring about an immediate end to hostilities.
Uganda and Rwanda have been accused by the UN group of experts of supporting M23 rebels, an allegation both countries have strongly denied.

Congo’s rebel army vows to take control of all DR Congo

http://www.inyenyerinews.org/amakuru-2/congos-rebel-army-vows-to-take-control-of-all-dr-congo/ 

A triumphant leader of the M23 rebels today promised to capture all of the Democratic Republic of Congo, including the capital Kinshasa, as thousands of soldiers and police defected to his forces.”We are now going to Kinshasa. No one will divide this country,” said Col. Vianney Kazarama, the M23 spokesman, to a cheering crowd of thousands at a rally in Goma, the eastern city the rebels took on Tuesday without firing a shot.

Col Kazarama said the M23 rebels’ next goal is Bukavu, the capital of South Kivu province on the other side of Lake Kivu. He claimed the rebels already control the town of Sake, 17 miles from Goma on the road to Bukavu, and will soon take Minova, a lakeside town in South Kivu.

More than 2,100 army troops and 700 police turned in their weapons, according to Col Seraphin Mirindi. The former army troops and policemen piled up their arms and ammunition in the stadium.

“Yesterday, we were enemies, but today we are friends,” said Col Mirindi. “We are brothers and we must work together.”

The rebel commander was addressing an audience of about 100 policemen – along with a similar number of bystanders – gathered in a baking hot room behind the town hall.Seated on a wooden throne, wrapped in white canvass and decorated with a scarlet sash, Col Mirindi said: “We want you to understand our ideology. The first priority is security of people and their belongings. Can you say you are secure when you are dying? I tell you, whoever loots, rapes or steals, he is going to be punished severely. We are very serious about this.”

Col Mirindi pledged that M23’s war against President Joseph Kabila’s regime would go on. Having seized one provincial capital – Goma in North Kivu province – the next target will be Bukavu, the main city in South Kivu. If that conurbation falls, the rebellion will move on to Kisangani, the main city in central Congo.

“We need to go to Bukavu to free it – and we need to go to Kisangani to free it,” said Col Mirindi. But first, he explained, the rebels would take a few days for “study, training and ideology”,

Col Mirindi ordered the police to return to their posts. “Since we must work together, we need to love each other,” he said. “We don’t need to bring up old stories. From today, everything is new.”

The blue-uniformed figures were soon visible on Goma’s shabby streets. And Col Mirindi had given them stern instructions: no looting and no extortion. “Who is ready for looting?” he demanded. “No one!” chorused the police emphatically.
Given that Goma is out of the hands of the national government, however, it was not clear who would be paying their wages.

But no gunshots echoed over the city and rebel fighters appeared disciplined, silent and un threatening as they strode their new domain in uniforms of smart camouflage, green forage caps – and Wellington boots. Their Kalashnikov assault rifles were slung from the shoulder, not ready for action.

The streets were soon filled with people and the atmosphere was calm. But every shop and petrol station remained closed and shuttered, while many chose to remain in the safety of neighbouring Rwanda.

During 52 years of tumultuous history since independence from Belgium, Goma has fallen into rebel hands at least three times before. On each occasion, there was a brief period of relief and even euphoria, before it became clear that the city’s new overlords were at least as brutal and predatory as those they had replaced. As the city experiences its fourth takeover, Goma is in the benevolent first stage.

How long the behaviour of its new masters will justify this optimism remains to be seen. Now that M23 – named after a failed peace agreement from March 23, 2009 – holds the biggest city in the east and a swathe of neighbouring territory, it will have immense bargaining power in the talks that will follow.

Already, Mr Kabila has been forced to negotiate. It emerged on Wednesday that he had met President Paul Kagame of Rwanda – allegedly the prime external force behind M23 – for two hours of talks on Tuesday. The rebel threat to advance further and capture more cities will only increase their bargaining authority.

SECURITY COUNCIL, ADOPTING RESOLUTION 2076, DEMANDS IMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL OF ‘M23’

http://www.inyenyerinews.org/amahanga-2/security-council-adopting-resolution-2076-demands-immediate-withdrawal-of-m23/

SECURITY COUNCIL, ADOPTING RESOLUTION 2076, DEMANDS IMMEDIATE WITHDRAWAL OF ‘M23’
REBELS FROM KEY CONGOLESE CITY, END TO ‘ANY AND ALL’ OUTSIDE SUPPORT
Condemns Attacks on Civilians, Peacekeepers, Humanitarian Workers;
Will Consider Reinforcing Mission, Imposing Additional Targeted Sanctions

The Security Council this evening demanded the immediate withdrawal of the armed group known as the 23 March Movement (M23) from the major eastern Congolese city of Goma and the cessation of any further advances, calling for a clarification of reports of external support provided to the group and stating its readiness to act on the basis of information received.

Unanimously adopting resolution 2076 (2012) under the Charter’s Chapter VII, the Council strongly condemned the M23 for its resumption of attacks, its entry into Goma today and its attacks on the civilian population, on peacekeepers of the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO) and on humanitarian actors, condemning in that context its abuses of human rights, including summary executions, gender-based violence and large-scale recruitment of child soldiers.

Demanding that “any and all outside support cease immediately” to the M23, the Council requested the Secretary-General to report in the coming days on the allegations of such support in coordination with the International Conference on the Great Lakes region and the African Union, expressing its readiness to “take further appropriate measures” on the basis of the report, including consideration of targeted sanctions against external supporters as well as the leadership of the M23. It called on all relevant actors to use their influence on the M23 to bring about an end to attacks.

Also in the coming days, the Council requested the Secretary-General to report on options for possible redeployments, in consultation with all partners, of MONUSCO personnel and materiel within the current authorized ceiling in order to better protect civilians and report on flows of arms across the borders of the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Following the adoption, Congolese representative Seraphin Ngwej said the rapidly deteriorating situation had begun five days ago in North Kivu after attacks on his country’s armed forces. He said evidence was mounting regarding Rwanda’s involvement in the Goma war. What had resulted was grave suffering, loss of life, rape, the forced recruitment of children as well as the displacement of large numbers of people and the halting of economic activities.

He asked the Security Council to strongly condemn the Rwandan troops’ violations of human rights, to demand that Rwanda immediately end acts of aggression and to remove its troops from Goma and the country. He also asked the Council to urge an end to violence and all activities aimed at destabilizing his Government, to support its efforts to re-establish authority in the east of the country and to apply sanctions against all leaders in the M23 and the Rwandan officers cited in the mid-term report of the United Nations Group of Experts.

He hoped, he said, that MONUSCO would become better able to respond, with the goal of maintaining peace.

Rwanda’s responsibility in destabilizing his country had been established, he said, urging the Council to conclude that Rwanda had violated the United Nations Charter, in presenting a serious threat to international peace and security in the subregion, through the threat or the use of force against the territorial integrity of a State. The Council, he said, should take the necessary action to restore peace and security in North Kivu. Frank dialogue with Rwanda could resolve the current security problems, he said, calling on the United Nations to facilitate it.

Rwanda’s representative, Olivier Nduhungirehe, taking the floor next, denied the account of the Congolese representative, stating that his country had spoken out against the ending of the ceasefire in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo and calling for the truce to be resumed. Rwanda had also been subjected to rocket attacks from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, resulting in fatalities. Those attacks had at first been acknowledged by Congolese authorities, but then a Government spokesman denied them. He asked the Council to condemn such attacks against a country that was not a party to the conflict and was trying to resolve the situation at the highest level.

What was needed in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, he said, was dialogue between the parties. The war in there was having negative effect on his country. Sanctions would only have counterproductive effects on the ground, he stressed, adding that his country was prepared to help bring about peace and assist refugees from the conflict.
The meeting began at 7:53 p.m. and ended at 8:11 p.m.
Resolution
The full text of resolution 2076 (2012) reads as follows:
“The Security Council,
“Recalling its previous resolutions and the statements of its President concerning the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), especially the presidential statement S/PRST/2012/22 of 19 October 2012 and the press statements of 2 August 2012 and 17 November 2012 on the situation in eastern DRC,

“Reaffirming its strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity of the DRC and emphasizing the need to respect fully the principles of non-interference, good-neighbourliness and regional cooperation,

“Reiterating its deep concern regarding the rapidly deteriorating security and humanitarian crisis in eastern DRC due to ongoing military activities of the 23 March Movement (M23),

“Expressing its deep concern regarding the resumption of attacks by the M23 and the entry of the M23 into the city of Goma on 20 November 2012, as well as the continuation of serious violations of international humanitarian law and abuses of human rights law by the M23 and other armed groups,

“Calling for all perpetrators, including individuals responsible for violence against children and acts of sexual violence, to be apprehended, brought to justice and held accountable for violations of applicable international law,

“Reiterating its strong condemnation of any and all external support to the M23, including through troop reinforcement, tactical advice and the supply of equipment, and expressing deep concern at reports and allegations indicating that such support continues to be provided to the M23,

“Expressing concern at the possible negative impact of the prevailing situation in North Kivu on the security and humanitarian situation in South Kivu,

“Expressing deep concern regarding the increasing number of displaced persons and refugees in Eastern DRC caused by the resumption of the attacks of the M23,

“Welcoming the efforts of the United Nations Secretary-General as well as of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR), the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the African Union, to restore peace and security in Eastern DRC,

“Welcoming the efforts of the Chair of the ICGLR in convening the Extraordinary Summits of 15 July 2012, 7-8 August 2012, 8 September 2012 and 8 October 2012 to address the situation in Eastern DRC,

“Stressing the primary responsibility of the Government of the DRC for ensuring security in its territory and protecting its civilians with respect for the rule of law, human rights and international humanitarian law,

“Calling on all parties to cooperate fully with the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the DRC (MONUSCO) and reiterating its condemnation of any attacks against peacekeepers,

“Determining that the situation in the DRC constitutes a threat to international peace and security in the region,

“Acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations,

“1. Strongly condemns the resumption of attacks by the M23 in North-Kivu and the entry of the M23 into the city of Goma on 20 November 2012;

“2. Demands the immediate withdrawal of the M23 from Goma, the cessation of any further advances by the M23 and that its members immediately and permanently disband and lay down their arms, and further demands the restoration of State authority of the Government of the DRC in Goma and in North-Kivu;

“3. Strongly condemns the M23 and all its attacks on the civilian population, MONUSCO peacekeepers and humanitarian actors, as well as its abuses of human rights, including summary executions, sexual and gender based violence and large scale recruitment and use of child soldiers, further condemns the attempts by the M23 to establish an illegitimate parallel administration and to undermine State authority of the Government of the DRC, and reiterates that those responsible for crimes and human rights abuses will be held accountable;

“4. Expresses deep concern at reports indicating that external support continues to be provided to the M23, including through troop reinforcement, tactical advice and the supply of equipment, causing a significant increase of the military abilities of the M23, and demands that any and all outside support to the M23 cease immediately;

“5. Requests the Secretary-General to report in the coming days, in coordination with the ICGLR and the African Union (AU), on the allegations of external support to the M23 and expresses its readiness to take further appropriate measures on the basis of this report;

“6. Calls on the ICGLR to monitor and inquire into, including by making active use of the Expanded Joint Verification Mechanism (EJVM), reports and allegations of outside support and supply of equipment to the M23, and encourages MONUSCO, in coordination with ICGLR members, to participate, as appropriate and within the limits of its capacities and mandate, in the activities of the EJVM;

“7. Expresses concern that M23 commanders Innocent Kaina and Baudouin Ngaruye are engaging in activities for which the Committee established pursuant to resolution 1533 (2004) may designate individuals pursuant to paragraph 4 of resolution 1857 (2008), and directs the Committee to review, as a matter of urgency, their activities and those of any other individuals who meet the criteria for designation;

“8. Expresses its intention to consider additional targeted sanctions, in accordance with the criteria set out in resolution 1857 (2008), against the leadership of the M23 and those providing external support to the M23 and those acting in violation of the sanctions regime and the arms embargo, and calls on all Member States to submit, as a matter of urgency, listing proposals to the 1533 Committee;

“9. Requests the Secretary-General to report in the coming days on options, and their implications, for the possible redeployments, in consultation with troop- and police-contributing countries, of MONUSCO contingents and additional force multipliers, observation capabilities and troops within the current authorized ceiling, which, in regard to the current crisis, could improve the ability of MONUSCO to implement its mandate, including to protect civilians and report on flows of arms and related materiel across the borders of Eastern DRC, and in this context expresses its intention to keep the mandate of MONUSCO under review;

“10. Calls on all relevant actors to use their influence on the M23 to bring about an end to attacks;

“11. Calls on all parties, in particular the M23, to allow safe, timely and unhindered humanitarian access to those in need in accordance with international law, including applicable international humanitarian law and the guiding principles of humanitarian assistance, and to refrain from any violence against civilians;

“12. Calls upon all parties to respect the civilian and humanitarian character of refugee camps and internally displaced persons sites and stresses the need to prevent any forced recruitment of individuals, including children by parties to the conflict;

“13. Commends the active steps taken by MONUSCO to implement its mandate, in particular the protection of civilians, further commends in this regard the tireless efforts of all MONUSCO contingents, particularly in and around Goma, and encourages the continuation of their efforts;

“14. Emphasizes that any attempts to undermine MONUSCO’s ability to implement its mandate will not be tolerated and condemns all individuals and entities who plan, sponsor or participate in attacks against MONUSCO;

“15. Welcomes and emphasizes the importance of the continuation of the efforts of the ICGLR, the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the AU to resolve the conflict and find a durable political solution, and calls on them and States of the region to coordinate their efforts in order to bring about an end to attacks, stabilize the situation and facilitate dialogue between relevant parties;

“16. Welcomes the designation of Boubacar Gaoussou Diarra as Special representative of the African Union for the Great Lakes region, requests the United Nations Secretary-General to report to the Council on options for high-level dialogue between relevant parties to address short-term and long-term causes underlying the political, security and humanitarian crises in Eastern DRC, including the option of the possible designation of a special envoy, and further requests the Secretary-General to report to the Council in the coming days on the evolution of the crisis and on diplomatic efforts, including his own;
“17. Emphasizes the primary responsibility of the Government of the DRC to reinforce State authority and governance in Eastern DRC, including through effective security sector reform to allow army and police reform, and to end impunity for abuses of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law, and urges the Government of the DRC to increase efforts to provide security, reform the security sector, protect civilians and respect human rights;

“18. Decides to remain actively seized of the matter.”