Saturday, October 20, 2012
UNITED NATIONS—A final report from an
independent United Nations body asserts Rwanda continues to back a rebel army in
eastern Congo despite international condemnation of
its alleged involvement in the conflict, as Rwanda steps up its rebuttal of the findings.
The report, which will be delivered to
the U.N.'s sanctions committee Oct. 12, says Rwanda hasn't lessened its
training and recruiting of troops for the rebel group, called M23, nor ceased
providing arms and logistical aid, in violation of sanctions prohibiting such
support, according to Rwandan government officials who have reviewed it, M23,
which the report estimates currently has about 1,250 soldiers who deserted
Congo's national army, continues to make territorial gains, the report says
according to the officials.
The Rwandan
government denounced the findings in the final report, calling them groundless
and based on rumor. It will deliver to the sanctions committee Friday a
scathing analysis of the procedures behind the report from a Washington law firm, Akin Gump, charging the U.N.
body that compiled it with bias and not giving the government proper
opportunity to respond to the allegations.
The
M23 rebellion, which began in April, has led to hundreds of deaths in the
volatile, mineral-rich area near the shared border between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo and displaced hundreds of thousands,
according to humanitarian groups.
The allegations, which
prompted a handful of countries to suspend or delay aid totaling more than $90
million to Rwanda after they first came to light in June, come just as the
country is expected to be elected as a nonpermanent member of the U.N.'s
powerful Security Council, for a two-year term beginning in 2013. The U.N.'s
General Assembly is scheduled to vote on the matter next week.
A Rwandan government official
who reviewed the final report said the Group of Experts, the team commissioned
by the U.N. to investigate the matter in Congo, "has adopted a
kitchen-sink strategy, collating every available piece of rumor and hearsay
evidence hoping that the sheer volume of accusation would make up for a
complete absence of material evidence to prove their case."
In a late-September interview
in New
York ,
Rwandan President Paul Kagame said,"We're talking about a Congo problem, but everyone wants to blame
us."
In its review to be delivered
to the U.N. sanctions committee Friday, Akin Gump, the law firm hired by the
Rwandan government, takes direct aim at the authors of the U.N. independent
report, primarily its coordinator Steve Hege, calling him biased against Rwanda
and therefore "unfit to continue in his current position."
It also says the group didn't
provide Rwandan officials with sufficient opportunity to address the findings
before they were submitted to the U.N., in several updates in recent months as
well as the final report to be delivered Friday, nor did it include what the
government did submit.
Mr. Hege declined to comment,
citing U.N. policy. An earlier addendum from the Group of Experts said,
"The Group has made extensive efforts to engage with the Rwandan
government regarding its findings, with some limited success." It added
that during an official visit in mid-May by the group to Kigali , the Rwandan capital, the government
"didn't receive them in any substantive meetings to discuss these
issues."
At a meeting earlier this week
in Kampala , Uganda of the International Conference on the
Great Lakes Region, regional heads of state agreed to move forward with a plan
to deploy a neutral force of 4,000 troops, under the auspices of the U.N. and
African Union, to combat the rebel group in eastern Congo .
Write
to Christopher
Rhoads at christopher.rhoads@wsj.com
A version of this article appeared October
11, 2012 ,
on page A9 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal,
with the headline: U.N. Report Alleges Rwanda Aids Rebels in Congo .
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