UN accuses Rwanda of leading DR Congo rebels
Report says M23 rebels are working
under the overall command of the Rwandan defence minister with the support of Uganda.
The
M23 rebels launched a mutiny against the government early this year after
breaking away from the army [AFP]
Rwanda's defence minister is commanding a rebellion in
eastern Democratic Republic of Congo that is being armed by Rwanda and Uganda, both of which sent troops to aid the insurgency in
a deadly attack on UN peacekeepers, according to a UN report.
The
UN Security Council's Group of Experts said in a confidential report that Rwanda and Uganda - despite their strong denials - continued to support
M23 rebels in their six-month fight against Congolese government troops in North Kivu province.
"Both
Rwanda and Uganda have been supporting M23," said the 44-page
report, which was seen by the Reuters news agency on Tuesday.
"Rwandan
officials exercise overall command and strategic planning for M23," the
report said. "Rwanda continues to violate the arms embargo through direct
military support to M23 rebels, facilitation of recruitment, encouragement and
facilitation of FARDC [Congolese army] desertions as well as the provision of
arms and ammunition, intelligence, and political advice."
"While
Rwandan officials coordinated the creation of the rebel movement as well as its
major military operations, Uganda's more subtle support to M23 allowed the rebel
group's political branch to operate from within Kampala and boost its external relations," it said.
Bosco
Ntaganda, a former Congolese general wanted by the International Criminal Court
for alleged war crimes, controls the rebellion on the ground and M23 leader
Sultani Makenga is in charge of operations and co-ordination with allied armed
groups, the UN report said.
Both
Ntaganda and Makenga "receive direct military orders from RDF [Rwandan
army] Chief of Defence staff General Charles Kayonga, who in turn acts on
instructions from Minister of Defence General James Kabarebe," it said.
'De facto administration'
Nearly
half a million people have been displaced due to the fighting.
M23
has proven so resilient that one senior UN diplomatic source told Reuters that Rwanda has effectively "annexed" mineral-rich
eastern Congo thanks to the rebel force.
UN
peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous said last month that the rebels had set up de
facto administration in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, controlling the
people and collecting taxes.
The
rebellion also is being funded by traders in Rwanda who are profiting from tin, tungsten and tantalum
smuggled across the border from mines in the eastern DRC, according to the UN
experts' report.
An
interim report from the Group of Experts that was published in June raised
similar accusations against Rwanda but with far less detail. Kigali was furious about that report, saying it was
one-side and contained false allegations.
Rwanda has backed armed movements in the Congo during the past two decades, citing a need to tackle
Rwandan rebels operating out of Congo's eastern hills.
The
new report said that M23 had expanded its control of Rutshuru Territory with extensive foreign support in July 2012 and had taken advantage of
a recent informal ceasefire "to expand alliances and command proxy
operations elsewhere."
The
experts said that units of the Ugandan and Rwandan armies "jointly
supported M23 in a series of attacks in July 2012 to take over the major towns
in Rutshuru Territory, and the [Congolese army] base of Rumangabo."
During
these attacks, the rebels killed a UN peacekeeper and fired on a UN
peacekeeping base at Kiwanja.
"According
to several M23 soldiers, RDF troops provided the rebels with heavy weapons such
as 12.7 mm machine guns, 60 mm, 91 mm and 120 mm mortars, as well as anti-tank
and anti-aircraft launchers ahead of the attack," the report said.
"RDF
Special Forces in Rutshuru also aided the rebels and fired 13 rounds on a FARDC
[Congolese army] combat helicopter during the takeover of Kiwanja," it
said.
Charges denied
Uganda and Rwanda have denied the accusations of involvement by the UN
experts, who monitor compliance with sanctions and an arms embargo on the Congo and delivered their report to the Security Council's
Congo sanctions committee earlier this month.
Ugandan
military spokesman Felix Kulayigye rejected the report.
"Where's
the evidence for their claims? Some of those so-called experts came here and
did not interview anyone," he said. "Where's their authentic facts to
back those claims? Those accusations are absolute rubbish, hogwash."
Olivier
Nduhungirehe, senior Rwandan diplomat at the country's UN mission, had a
similar denial, which he sent to Reuters on Sunday. He said the UN experts had
been "allowed to pursue a political agenda that has nothing to do with
getting at the true causes of conflict in the eastern DRC."
Rwandan
President Paul Kagame reiterated Rwanda's denials at a high level meeting in New York last month that both he and Congolese President
Joseph Kabila attended.
The
Group of Experts said that it had corroborated its findings with multiple
intelligence sources.
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