Regional
The M23 problem, Kigali’s headache and some truths few want to hear
Soon
after Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni was elected President of the
Organisation of African Unity (OAU) – the predecessor to the African Union --
the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) composed of Rwandan exiles and refugees,
mostly Tutsis, decided to attack Rwanda on October 1, 1990 using his country as
a launch pad.
Four
years earlier, the Rwandans had helped Museveni rise to power in Kampala and
had held key positions in the new Ugandan army. Paul Kagame, the current
president of Rwanda, was a senior officer in the Ugandan military intelligence,
while his comrade in arms Fred Rwigema, killed at the frontline in the early
days of the campaign, had been minister of State for Defence.
Museveni
was upset, his election at the helm of the continental body meant the elevation
of the former rebel leader, brought to power by the force of arms, as an equal
among world peers. And now these “boys,” as Museveni used to call them, risked
ruining his moment. The situation seemed all the more upsetting as he had
trouble convincing anyone that he was not behind this “aggression” on a
neighbouring and brotherly country.
Museveni
recounted how it happened while he was attending the United Nations General
Assembly in New York: “The news reached me at night, I tried to wake President
[Juvenal] Habyarimana in vain. The man was a heavy sleeper.”
Thirty
years later, Rwanda was likely in the position Museveni was, following the
recent attacks of the Congolese rebel movement of March 23rd, as M23 – in
reference to an unfulfilled peace treaty signed on March 23, 2009, between its
leaders and the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
It came as Kigali was getting ready to host, in less than a month, 50 heads of state, members of the Commonwealth. While relations between Rwanda and the DRC had finally warmed up with the advent of Félix Tshisekedi to power in Kinshasa, Kigali would have done without another M23 attack, which put it in a delicate geopolitical situation, provoking fresh anti-Rwandan rhetoric in DRC.
Congo problem, Rwandan exhibits
A rebel group in Ituri Province, the northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo on September 19, 2020.
The
DRC public often conflates the M23 with the Rwandan army, and for good reason.
Some commanders of the rebel group had joined the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA),
the military wing of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) in its own armed
struggle of the 1990s which put an end to the genocide against the Tutsi.
Once
the war was over, the Congolese Tutsi returned home to their highlands of Kivu,
eastern DRC, where in the meantime, anti-Tutsi hatred had been shifted by the
genocide perpetrators, who had been defeated back home. Supported by then
Zairean strongman Mobutu Sese Seko, the “genocidaires” were targeting the Tutsi
in Zaire.
This
is how, with the support of Rwanda and Uganda, they took up arms again to
defend their community in a struggle that galvanised other Mobutu opponents
with their own national grievances, leading them to march on Kinshasa, ousting
Mobutu, and replacing him with Laurent Désiré Kabila in September 1997.
Once
installed, Kabila would fall out with his hitherto allies who had brought him
to power, even going as far as collaborating with the same genocidaires. His
replacement by his son Joseph Kabila would not change much.
In
Rwanda, there was hope with the advent, at last, of a new first name in the
Congolese political spectrum since its independence in 1960: in the absence of
Antoine, the patriarch; his heir Felix!
All
seemed well at first, with the coming to power of Felix Tshisekedi, relations
between the DRC and Rwanda were almost repaired. It was mostly the Congolese
diaspora, aggrieved by “the aggression of little Rwanda on great Zaire,” who
disliked the new rapprochement.
Short-lived honeymoon
To
understand the “M23 problem” one needs to appreciate that there are three types
of rebels in the DRC. The first, small militias with no national political
agenda, that attack civilians, rarely fight each other, coexist with the
regular army (FARDC) and UN peacekeepers (Monusco). These constitute the
majority, their interests do not go beyond their communities. There are more than 100.
Then
there are foreign groups that exploit the weakness – some read it as an absence
- of the state and national army, to use the vast DRC territory as a breeding
ground for attacks against their countries of origin. It is in this category
that we find the Rwandan genocidaires, known as FDLR, and the Ugandan terrorists known as ADF-NALU. In the past, there
were other Sudanese and Ugandan groups – including the infamous Lord Resistance
Army (LRA) of Joseph Kony, Congo-Brazzaville groups and even Angolans. The
dense forests of the DRC are a festering ground for all manner of armed groups
from the region.
Then
there is the M23. Congolese citizens, with national grievances linked to lack
of security, discrimination of their community and poor governance at large.
The
first and second categories of militias are rarely bothered because they do
everyone’s business: smuggling, illicit trafficking of minerals, enriching
FARDC commanders and multinationals, sponsor political careers in Kinshasa and
justify the presence of both UN forces in the DRC for more than 20 years and
that of the Force Intervention Brigade (FIB) for 10 years.
The
M23 pose a (geo)political problem, because they seize territory, threaten power
in the capital Kinshasa, which in turn exposes the weaknesses of the national
army, of national politics, and of the UN. To make themselves heard, the M23
are fighting against everyone, including the two other categories of rebel
groups, the FARDC, and even Monusco – sometimes all three in a coalition.
According
to an “incident monitoring think tank” manned by international researchers in
eastern DRC, the Congolese army FARDC is one of the most violent against
civilians, at times their killings surpass those of Ugandan Islamists ADF-Nalu,
and Rwandan FDLR genocidaires.
Ten
years ago, M23 was defeated by a UN-backed Force Intervention Brigade (FIB)
made of South African, Tanzanian and Malawian armies. FIB’s mission was to
defeat “all the negative forces” in eastern DRC. At the time, M23 posed little
resistance and with some political assurances, withdrew into Rwanda and Uganda.
The FIB seems to have since “acclimatised” to Congolese “Rumba” like everyone else, read: doing nothing, and allegedly engaging in illicit trade..
Map showing conflict-prone DRC provinces
Upon
accession to power, President Tshisekedi wanted to be seen as tackling the
protracted armed conflict in eastern DRC. So he declared a “State of Siege” in
North Kivu and Ituri. State of emergency means the region is run by the army
and most civil rights are suspended. State of emergency also means a hefty
budget sent to eastern DRC and managed by the army.
However,
a recent parliament audit revealed that of the $74 million allocated to “State
of siege” to be sent to Kivu and Ituri, 68 percent was “eaten” in Kinshasa, 12
percent went to unknown expenditure of the army, and only the remaining 20
percent was sent to eastern Congo.
Following
the recent attack by the M23 two months ago, the occupation of the towns of Bunagana and the province
of Ruchuru on the border with Uganda, Tshisekedi accused Rwanda of
supporting the rebel movement, a charge Kigali vehemently denies.
But
what alternative did Tshisekedi have? Should he have explained to the Congolese
that they have no army? That they never had one? That Mobutu appealed to
mercenaries (Jean Schramme, Bob Denard) or to foreign countries (Morocco,
Senegal, Chad, Togo) to help keep security and power? There are more than 58
countries contributing troops to Monusco for over 20 years, with dismal
results.
Monusco soldiers fire at Codeco militia during the extraction of a Red Cross team which had been ambushed in Dhedja on December 19, 2021 in Ituri, DR Congo.
The
FARDC spend their time playing “Sobels” (Soldier by day, Rebel by night) – a
sobriquet borrowed from Sierra Leone and Liberia civil war of the 90s. They
change clothes to loot the populations they are supposed to protect,
collaborate with the FDLR, and sell weapons and ammunition on the black market
from Uvira to Beni.
Are
the Congolese ready to listen to these truths? The first politician to venture
there would immediately sign his political death, a year before the elections,
and Tshisekedi is not suicidal. Using Rwanda as a scapegoat seems like the only
political card in his hand.
Hate speech revived
While
no proof of these accusations has been brought forth, the streets, from
Kinshasa to Brussels, need no further convincing. Unfortunately, accusing
Rwanda brings with it the old demons of “Tutsiphobia”. Anti-Tutsi hate speech
across DRC has risen to troubling proportions. Congolese social media is awash
with anti-Rwanda hate speech, lists of Tutsi members of the FARDC are being
published online with rewards promised to anyone who would “cleanse our army”.
Tutsi
of Banyamulenge community in South Kivu’s high plateau have left their
homesteads after their cattle were looted by various militia, and now live in
UN-protected IDP camps.
Images
of young militias affiliated to Tshisekedi’s ruling party (UDPS) were seen in
the streets of Kinshasa, armed with machetes, stopping cars looking for Tutsis.
Several people have been killed by Congolese mobs, for allegedly “looking”
Tutsi, including one Lt-Col Joseph Kaminzobe, member of the Banyamulenge
community and officer of the regular army, burnt alive by young people in
Lweba, South Kivu. Many Congolese Tutsi civilians are reported to have
been burnt alive, and at least in one case, Mr Semutobo, a Munyamulenge, was
lynched by a mob of young people in Kalima district who posted it online.
M23’s beef with Kinshasa
A peace agreement signed in Nairobi in December 2013, between
the Congolese government and the M23 consisted of:
- Amnesty to all M23 fighters who did not
commit war crimes and crimes against humanity;
- Register M23 as a legitimate political
party.
- Repatriation of “Rwandophone” of
Congolese nationality, sheltered in refugee camps in Rwanda and Uganda.
The
agreement has never been implemented for ten years hence, causing the recent
attack by the M23.
Ironically,
M23 claims it doesn’t want to fight. While they are occupying important towns
of Bunagana and Ruchuru in Noth Kivu, they claim to do so to compel the DRC
government to implement the Nairobi accords and are ready to relinquish them.
Bunagana in the Democratic Republic of Congo on the border with Uganda.
Amid
the accusations against Rwanda and its denials, there is one fact: Kigali is
not going to fight the M23.
Indeed
options of possible support to the DRC army in fighting M23 were being studied
in Rwandan quarters until Congolese politicians started accusing Kigali
and FARDC shelled Rwandan territories of Rubavu and
Kinigi, heightening tensions between the two neighbours.
As a
reminder, the M23 political wing, which has been sheltered in Rwanda for the
last ten years, has not left their camps, while those of Uganda, led by
Commander Sultani Makenga quietly left Uganda five years ago, and have
since been based in DRC forests near the Ugandan border.
Following
routs on the battlefield during the war that opposed it to the RPF in the 90s,
then Habyarimana’s government accused “Ibyitso Tutsi” internal spies of
the loss. My mother, who had run a hairdressing salon in Kigali for 10 years,
and who had never been involved in politics, was arrested and detained for a
year with thousands of other civilians, for the simple reason that they were
Tutsi. Today, it is the turn of any Congolese with “Tutsi facial expressions”
to “prove their citizenship”.
I am
not worried about the repeated calls by Congolese populists to attack and annex
Rwanda, after all, as Wole Soyinka would say, “A tiger does not proclaim his
tigritude, he pounces”. What worries me is the resurgence of hate speech and
violent killings targeting Congolese Tutsi, and anyone with “doubtful”
features; the Luba, Ngbandi, Bashi… all Congolese citizens.
Source:
www.theeastafrican.co.ke