Regional
MONUSCO condemns hate speech in DR Congo as analysts question inaction against genocidaires
On the occasion of the first International Day against Hate Speech marked on Saturday, June 18, Bintou Keita, Head of the United Nations Mission in DR Congo (MONUSCO), condemned the proliferation of hate speech and violence in eastern DR Congo.
Her
statement comes more than a month after authorities in Kinshasa alleged that
Rwanda is involved in the eastern DR Congo crisis following the resurgence of
the M23 rebellion. Kinshasa labeled Kigali as an enemy and, among other related
actions, incited the population to arm themselves with machetes and hunt the
supposed enemy, leading to shocking persecution of Rwandans and
Kinyarwanda-speaking Congolese especially in North and South Kivu Provinces.
While
Rwanda has appealed to the DR Congo to observe good neighborliness, own
up to her problems, and avoid apportioning blame where none exists, mainstream
media as well as social media has since last month continued to publish
disturbing trends of public incitement and calls to Genocide. These include
proliferation of hate speech spreading double genocide theory and the
stigmatization and torture of Kinyarwanda-speaking Congolese calling on them to
return to Rwanda.
Keita
said: “Hate speech leads to violence and divides us, where on the contrary, we
must strengthen cohesion and live together. This is what Congolese men and
women need. This is what all people in the Great Lakes region need.”
“I
call on everyone to turn our backs on racism and xenophobia. Let's not give
place to hateful speeches that have only too much fueled the violence in the
DRC and among its neighbours. Let's work together for peace.”
Tensions
escalated between the two neighbouring countries following the resurgence of
the M23 rebellion in the DR Congo’s restive east, with fighting between the
Congolese army (FARDC) and the M23 rebels near the common border
threatening to drag Rwanda into the conflict.
On
June 17, an armed Congolese soldier crossed into Rwanda and
indiscriminately fired shots, leaving two Rwandan police officers
injured before he was shot dead. In at least three recent occasions,
including on May 23 and June 10, rockets fired from the Congolese side of the border, injured
several people in Rwanda.
Not
expected to operate independently
Reacting
to Keita’s statement, Frederick Golooba-Mutebi, an independent researcher and
political analyst, told The New Times that the United Nations
diplomat “cannot, really, be expected to operate independently” regardless of
what she might think.
“I
think that when she says things or when she makes statements and what she says,
is very much function of what is acceptable to MONUSCO and whoever is in
control of MONUSCO,” he said.
Like
many other analysts, the political analyst is baffled by the fact that for
nearly three decades the UN Mission in DR Congo “has, clearly, been unwilling
to tackle FDLR.”
Though
not given enough attention by the UN force, the FDLR comprises remnants of the
perpetrators of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda. After killing
more than one million people 28 years ago, they fled into eastern DR Congo
where they continue to spread genocide ideology and hate speech.
Amb
MP Fatuma Ndangiza, Chairperson of the East African Legislative Assembly’s
Committee on Regional Affairs and Conflict Resolution, welcomed Keita’s
statement condemning hate speech but is surprised she took so long to speak
out.
Amb
Ndangiza said: “Aware of the recurring spread of hate speech and anti-Rwanda
and anti-Tutsi hate propaganda sowing the seeds of racism and genocide ideology
among the people of DRC, it is surprising to note that the United Nations wait
for the 18th June International Day Against Hate Speech to condemn racism,
intolerance and hate speech. The experience of the 1994 genocide against the
Tutsi should be a fresh reminder of the failure of the international community
to prevent or avert genocide despite the alarming reports from UNAMIR about the
impending genocide.”
Disappointed
by Keita’s statement, Eric Ndushabandi, professor of political science at the
University of Rwanda, said he would have loved “to hear what kind of actions
they [MONUSCO] could take” to stop the ongoing proliferation of hate speech by
Congolese individuals and government officials.
The
problem, he said, is the same UN system which takes long to act or never acts
where necessary.
Ndushabandi
said: “The bureaucracy of the UN system is still the same, which is making this
system to fail in Congo. They are totally absent. We could have seen more than
one statement denouncing every single incident we see on social media. I hope
they [UN] are following.”
Every
single act and speech on social media of proliferation of hate speech spreading
genocide ideology and xenophobia should have been picked up by an early warning
system but this, Ndushabandi said, has not happened despite several calls being
made for it to be in place.
Hold
DR Congo accountable
Amb
Ndangiza said the early warning signal of what is unfolding especially in
eastern DR Congo, with politicians and elites propagating hatred and
intolerance against Rwandans in public discourse, social media and threats of
persecution “calls for immediate action by the international community to hold
the leadership of the country accountable.”
She
said: “What is happening is unacceptable. It’s high time that Congolese
government addresses its internal challenges rather than looking for
scapegoats, linking the issue of M23 with Rwanda yet it is purely a
Congolese problem.”
Amb
Ndangiza also wonders why the UN peacekeeping mission, for over two decades,
has failed to address the issue of FDLR who are bent on perpetuating genocide,
which is not only a threat to the stability of Rwanda but the entire Great
Lakes region.
MP
Fred Mukasa Mbidde, another regional lawmaker, noted that when it comes to
matters related to genocide, MONUSCO “and the UN per say, has always adopted a
slumber land approach.”
“We
are talking about the death of a whole race of a people and leaders, instead,
are spasmodically, just seldom, coming out merely to give rhetoric,” Mbidde
said.
“It
is extremely mindboggling how a whole race of people is being exterminated by
machete happy individuals. It cannot be explained that in this century, acts of
that nature continue to exist.”
Mbidde
who refers to the M23 as freedom fighters, not terrorists as suggested by
Kinshasa, told The New Times that he joins “those who think
that the fighting forces [M23]” should not agree and accede to cessation of
hostilities until proper protection of their people has been guaranteed. What
is happening right now in DR Congo, Mbidde said, is “indicative of government
failure to protect the lives of the people.”
He
added: “And if people as are facing death by machete and all weapon
wielding individuals, some even donning military attire, that means that
fighting groups including the M23 should now be the military wing for the
protection of the people. This therefore implies that any actors now intending
to solve the problems that are happening, first of all, should guarantee the
immediate security of the lives of the people.”
Golooba-Mutebi
noted that it is clear, and on record, that UN peacekeepers have always claimed
that they can’t fight FDLR because these insurgents live with women and
children and the peacekeepers will endanger the lives of women and children, if
they attack.
Interestingly,
he noted, they never hesitate to make threatening statements against M23 or
even to try and combat it militarily.
Golooba-Mutebi
said: “It is pretty much safe to conclude, I think, that there is some kind of
prejudice in this because if there are more than 120 rebel groups in Congo, how
many other groups has MONUSCO been targeting? The ADF has been there for ages
and MONUSCO never moved a finger to deal with them. The FDLR has been there for
ages, and all these other groups.
“Their
keenness to use military force against M23 has always puzzled me. I think it is
probably the product of the claims that people make, quite easily, that M23 is
Rwanda’s proxy. But again, one could also ask; what about ADF? But maybe
because it is allegedly not government supported that’s why they go slowly on
it.”
“There
are real concerns of communities from which the large number of actors from
these groups comes from but until those are addressed by MONUSCO and the DRC
government, and other members of the international community, it is going to be
very difficult to resolve this whole Congo security issue.”
Source:
www.newtimes.co.rw