UN's
Refusal to
Fight FDLR
Inquired into
by ICP, As
Reuters Cuts
In
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, July
14 -- With UN
Peacekeeping
under Herve
Ladsous still
not acting
against the
Hutu FDLR
militia, on
July 14 Inner
City Press
asked UN envoy
Martin Kobler
what he meant
by saying "the
suspension of
joint
cooperation by
the FARDC goes
beyond the
original
question over
human rights,"
and that "we
have revised
the Human
Rights Due
Diligence
Policy."
Kobler on the
latter said
that the
policy is now
someone
simpler and
more
transparent to
the DRC
government. As
Inner City
Press asked
about the FDLR
going into
Burundi, the
Reuters
correspondent
who routinely
channels
Ladsous
without
anything about
his cover up
of rapes in
Darfur and now
in Central
African
Republic by
French
Sangaris
troops,
repeatedly cut
in. There
is a history
- will the
craven service
of Ladsous
continue?
Watch this
site.
On another
militia, the
FRPI, Kobler
said
“As we speak,
FARDC military
cordon and
search
operations
supported by
MONUSCO forces
against the
Front for
Patriotic
Resistance in
Ituri (FRPI)
are ongoing.
These
operations are
the most
effective
since the fall
of the M23.
They are a
testament to
what our
collective
efforts can
achieve.
“Let me be
clear, not to
use force is
always our
preferred
option. Our
priority was
to ensure that
FRPI disarms
voluntarily.
We actively
participated
and supported
the
negotiations
that would
have allowed
the combatants
to reintegrate
into civilian
life.
“However, the
use of force
proved to be
inevitable
this time.
After missing
three
consecutive
deadlines to
surrender,
MONUSCO forces
- in support
of the
Congolese army
- engaged FRPI
in a jointly
planned and
coordinated
response. The
Congolese
army's ground
offensive,
aided by our
attack
helicopters
and Unmanned
Aerial
Vehicles,
proved to be
effective.
Since June 3,
our joint
efforts have
neutralized
about one
fourth of the
total FRPI
strength. Our
work is not
over yet, as
we continue
joint
operations
while we try
to convince
the remaining
combatants to
surrender.”
Across First
Avenue
Ladsous'
predecessor
Jean Marie
Guehenno was
speaking,
saying he
recused
himself from
acting for
example on
Cote d'Ivoire.
Ladsous
doesn't
recuse, on
Mali, CAR or
DRC - and he
doesn't
answer. We'll
have more on
this.
Back
on March 19,
2015, UN
Peacekeeping's
refusal under
Herve Ladsous
to support
operations
against the
Hutu FDLR
militia was
exposed.
The
UN has
previously
give a human
rights waiver
to support the
two generals
now cited by
Ladsous as the
UN's excuse to
not take on
the FDLR.
Well, Ladsous'
lapdogs can
try to cover
this right
back over. A
lengthy
Reuters piece
sold
as "Insight"
merely repeats
at face value
that Congolese
president
Joseph
Kabila's "army
is fighting
without the
support of
MONUSCO after
a row over
suspected
rights abuses
by two
Congolese
commanders led
the United
Nations to
suspend
involvement."
Reuters
typically
makes no
mention of the
contradiction
that became
inescapable
last week in
front of the
Security
Council, and
in the UN's
public (non)
response.
Inner
City Press: I
want to ask
you about this
thing that
arose
yesterday
around the
Security
Council
meeting about
the fact that
the UN had
granted a
waiver to work
with these two
Congolese
generals that
are the reason
given for not
participating
in the
offensive on
the FDLR
(Forces
Démocratiques
de Libération
du
Rwanda).
And the
Foreign
Minister of
the DRC said
that in the
previous case,
on the LRA
(Lord’s
Resistance
Army) in
Ituri, the UN
had requested
a waiver and
it was
granted. Who
gives the
waiver?
Does MONUSCO
(United
Nations
Organization
Stabilization
Mission in the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo) on
its own reach
a
determination
that it can
waive its
rules and work
with generals
that have
these bad
human rights
records, or is
it a request
made by
MONUSCO to
DPKO
(Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations)
headquarters
here?
Was the
request made
in the case of
the
FDLR?
And most
fundamentally,
if the
generals are
the same, what
does it say
that a waiver
was granted to
fight the LRA
but not to
fight the
FDLR, in terms
of the UN’s
commitment to
fight the
FDLR?
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq: I
believe that
Mr. [Martin]
Kobler was
asked some of
this at the
stakeout.
I don’t really
have anything
to add to Mr.
Kobler’s own
comments on
this
matter.
He has given
his views on
this. On
the case of
Generals Bruno
Mandevu and
Sikabwe Fall,
the clear
point is that
in accordance
with our human
rights due
diligence
policy, we
cannot extend
the support if
we believe
that support
will
contribute to
a course of
action in
which human
rights will be
violated.
And we do not
want to be
supporting
anything that
leads to gross
violations of
human
rights.
And we’ll have
to stick to
that.
Inner City
Press:
But the reason
I’m asking is
because you
say that we
cannot support
them, but in
fact, the UN
did support
them, knowing
their
records.
It granted a
waiver.
That’s why it
-- I’m asking
you, how does
the waiver
process
work? Is
it done by Mr.
Kobler?
Is it done by
Herve Ladsous?
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq:
Like I said,
Mr. Kobler has
spoken to this
at the
stakeout.
I just refer
you to what he
said.
But Kobler did
not
answer this
question: Video here.
On March 19
Kobler told
the Security
Council that
the UN
suspended its
participation
and support
against the
FDLR due to
the inclusion
of "officers
who formerly
commanded
units with a
credible
history of
human rights
violations."
But then
Congolese
Foreign
Minister
Raymond
Tshibanda told
Inner City
Press that the
UN had in the
past worked
with the two
generals at
issue, in
Ituri, and
against the
Lords
Resistance
Army.
At
the Security
Council
stakeout,
after a
question by
Reuters that
did not ask
about this
previous UN
support of the
generals,
which
undermines its
coverage,
Inner City
Press asked
Kobler
directly if
the UN had
supported the
two generals
in the past.
Yes, Kobler
admitted,
saying even
that there was
a UN waiver in
those cases.
Inner City
Press asked
the obvious
question: if
UN
Peacekeeping
under Ladsous
claims despite
history
that it is
committed to
neutralizing
the FDLR as it
did the M23,
why wasn't the
case treated
as important
as Ituri, with
waiver or
otherwise?
And
what now of
Kobler (who
remains
genial, we
must say)?
Watch this
site.
Back
on February 6
after the UN
claimed to be
jointly
fighting the
FDLR rebels
with the
Congolese Army
FARDC, then to
be supporting
the FARDC to
do so, Inner
City Press
asked UN
Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric more
questions, and
he said "the
military
actual
fighting has
not, as far as
we know, has
not
commenced." Video here.
This has been
reiterated
repeatedly by
the UN: no
action has
been take by
the FARDC
against the
FDLR.
Nevertheless
once again on
February 23
Reuters made
it appear that
the Congolese
Army under
Joseph Kabila
IS fighting
the FDLR, with
no mention of
UN
Peacekeeping
chief Ladsous'
history and
seeming double
game. With two
editors, Reuters"reports"
that
"President Joseph Kabila said last week that the
operation had
started
without
MONUSCO. A
government
spokesman said
Congo
"renounces, in
the most
official
manner, the
support of
MONUSCO to
track the
FDLR. We are
going to track
them alone."
So, did the
operations
start? On
February 23,
Inner City
Press asked UN
Spokesman
Dujarric:
Inner
City Press: On
DRC. The
Radio Okapi
which I
understand is
a UN-supported
media in the
Congo has
reported
abuses about
the FDLR in
and around
Lubero.
Since I would
assume that
means that
MONUSCO
[United
Nations
Organization
Stabilization
Mission in the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo] is
aware of them
and it’s been
said that they
have a
protection of
civilians
mandate
totally
outside of the
neutralization
of the FDLR,
has MONUSCO
done anything
about these UN
essentially
reported —
Spokesman
Dujarric:
Valid
question.
I have not
gotten an
update from
MONUSCO today,
but we will
try to extract
one.
Five
hours later,
nothing. On February 18,
Inner City
Press asked
Dujarric the
question of
why Herve
Ladsous'
MONUSCO has
not itself
taken action
on the FDLR:
Inner
City Press: A
spokesman for
the Congolese
Government,
Lambert Mende,
has said that
MONUSCO
[United
Nations
Organization
Stabilization
Mission in the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo] is
free to do its
own operation
against FDLR
[Democratic
Forces for the
Liberation of
Rwanda].
He says that
the Government
has nothing
against
that.
And I know
that it's come
up that,
somehow, the
UN, because of
its stated
human rights
concerns is
not going to
work with the
Government to
go after the
FDLR.
But, if the
Government
there is
essentially
giving its
consent, what
am I
missing?
Why isn't the
UN doing what
was said it
would do
following 2
January?
Spokesman:
I would… I
would check
with the
Mission
itself.
I have nothing
to say from
here.
The UN - and
Ladsous, given
his history -
SHOULD have
something to
say.
On February
17, Inner City
Press asked
again,
"Are you aware
of any action
taken by the
Congolese Army
against FDLR?
Dujarric's
deputy Farhan
Haq replied,
"I'm not aware
of offensive
military
operations,
no."
It
'reports' that
"'The next
step is the
dispatch of
formal letters
to the
relevant
Congolese
authorities
concerning the
cessation of
support to the
FARDC in these
anti-FDLR
operations,'
said the U.N.
official."
What anti-FDLR
actions?
Tellingly, the
story doesn't
even purport
to give a
reason for
according the
"UN official"
anonymity.
So what
is Reuters'
policy on
granting
anonymity?
Shouldn't the
reason be
stated?
Reuters has
previously
refused to
explain basic
policies -
including on censorship
like this.
This Reuters
series,
praising the
UN for
"pausing" or
suspending
action against
the FDLR that
never even
began, is
affirmatively
misleading. UN
Peacekeeping
hands faux
secrets to
Reuters in
exchange for
positive,
uncritical
coverage.
On February
11, Inner City
Press asked
Spokesman
Dujarric about
this Reuters
"exclusive" on
a spoonfed
quote: how can
something that
never began be
paused? February
11 video here.
There is as
yet no answer.
Inner
City Press: I
want to know
whether the UN
can say
whether the
FARDC has, in
fact, begun
any operations
against the
FDLR.
And you read
the resolution
and it says
“unilateral”.
It says that
the MONUSCO
can take
action as it
did on M23 [23
March
Movement], and
so, I'm
wondering, are
there
preparations
to do just
that?
Deputy
Spokesman
Haq:
Well, that
same
resolution
2147 (2014),
also spells
out the phrase
“consent of
all parties”,
and that's an
important
phrase for
us.
MONUSCO will
act under the
instruction of
the Security
Council, like
I said.
It's got the
technical
capacities.
It has
sufficient
enablers and
is
well-trained
and it has
well-trained
and
well-equipped
professional
peacekeepers
to conduct
such an
operation
successfully.
If there's any
UN operation
to be taken
against the
FDLR, it would
have to be
taken in line
with
international
humanitarian
law. In
this regard,
contingency
plans are
being
reviewed...
Inner City
Press:
And is there a
FARDC action
yet?
Sorry. I
just wanted to
get back to
that.
Are you aware
of any action
taken by the
Congolese Army
against FDLR?
Deputy
Spokesman:
I'm not aware
of offensive
military
operations,
no.
Inner
City Press: I
wanted to ask
on the
Democratic
Republic of
the
Congo, a
self-described
senior UN
official had
said they have
laid down an
ultimatum as
to two
generals that
are leading
the Congolese
stated fight
against the
FDLR [Forces
démocratiques
de libération
du
Rwanda].
And today
Lambert Mende,
spokesman of
the
Government,
has said that
they reject
these
ultimatums and
so I wanted to
know, the way
it’s described
is that the UN
— I’ve been
asking you
here, but
obviously
something was
said elsewhere
in the
building to
some that the
ultimatum is
until 13
February or
they would
forfeit
MONUSCO’s
support to the
operation.
So I wanted —
I don’t think
it’s an
operational
detail.
I want to
know:
Has the UN
been providing
support to
units of the
FARDC [Armed
Forces of the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo]
engaged with
the
FDLR?
Which units
are
those?
And would it,
in fact — will
it now, given
this
statement, be
suspended?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
A couple of
things.
First of all,
my
understanding
from here is
that the FARDC
operations
have not
commenced in
terms of the
military
operations.
The
discussions
regarding the
human rights
issues that
we’ve raised
about the two
generals are
ongoing and
they’re
ongoing in
Kinshasa.
Inner City
Press:
Right.
But can you
react — the
spokesman for
the Government
has said we
will only
replace them
if there is…
Spokesman:
Well, I did
hear your
question.
My reaction is
that the
discussions
are ongoing in
Kinshasa.
Inner City
Press:
One last thing
because I’ve
seen there
have been
various
statements
about the
actions have
already
started.
“We welcome
the
action.”
“We are
fleeing the
action.”
Do you
know…
[overlapping
talking]
Spokesman:
I’m just
saying, my
understanding
is the
military
actual
fighting has
not, as far as
we know, has
not
commenced.
The operation
is under
way. But
obviously, we
understand
that the
actual —
there’s been
no actual
fighting
reported as of
yet.
Inner City
Press:
Why can’t we
get DPKO
(Department of
Peacekeeping
Operations) on
the record to
speak about
this matter?
Spokesman:
Well, I think
as I said this
is a — this
operation is
being led from
— our support
for the
operation is
being led from
the field, and
I think the
questions will
be answered
there.
Inner City
Press:
Was a senior
official here
in the
building or—
Spokesman:
You know
what?
The one thing
we do have a
lot of here
are senior UN
officials.
Thank you.
On
February 5, UN
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq
when Inner
City Press
asked if ANY
support from
the UN is
being given,
did not say
Yes. Video
here.
Ladsous did
this on the
Congolese Army
rapes in
Minova, using
the same
scribes; he is
preparing the
same scam to
explain his
mission's
covering up of
rapes in Tabit
in Darfur,
Sudan (more on
this to come).
"The
United Nations
has threatened
to withdraw
support for a
planned
Democratic
Republic of
Congo (DRC)
military
campaign
against
Rwandan rebels
if the
government
does not
remove two
generals
accused of
human rights
abuses by the
end of next
week, a senior
U.N. official
said on
Wednesday. The
official,
speaking on
condition of
anonymity,
said the world
body has told
Congolese
Foreign
Minister
Raymond
Tshibanda: 'If
you keep these
guys we're not
going to be in
a position to
support you
... get these
people out.'"
Inner
City Press:
Since it's UN
Social Media
Day, MONUSCO
46 minutes ago
said
that —
I'll say it in
French: Les
operations
militaires
contre les
#FDLR, lancées
hier jeudi,
seront
dirigées et
planifiées
conjointement
par la
#MONUSCO et
les
FARDC.
So unless I'm
misunderstanding
this, they're
claiming that
it's a joint
operation,
“conjointement”,
on their
Twitter
feed. I
wanted to
know, why
would they be
doing that,
given what
you've just
said?
Spokesman:
I think
without going
into a deep
analysis of
French and
English, which
you obviously
are able to do
and I couldn't
try to keep up
with you, I
think it is a
different
characterization
maybe, a
different use
of words, but
I think the
point is that
it's an
FARDC-led
operation with
the support of
the UN.
On February 2,
Inner City
Press asked
Dujarric more
specifically,
video
here,
"The
U.N.
peacekeeping
mission in
Congo
threatened in
2013 to
withdraw
support for
two Congolese
battalions
accused of
involvement in
the mass rape.
The mission
decided to
keep working
with the
battalions
after 12
senior
officers,
including the
commanders and
deputy
commanders,
were suspended
and about a
dozen soldiers
were charged
over the rapes
in Minova."
This is
propaganda --
only two lower
ranking
soldiers were
convicted. The
Reuters
implication is
that Ladsous'
DPKO is tough
on human
rights: false.
On #DRC,
UN Spox says
it's NOT a
joint
operation. But
@MONUSCO
says “dirigées
conjointement
par #MONUSCO
et les #FARDC.”
On January
22
Ladsous made a
speech about
freedom of the
press in the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo
Thursday to
the US
Security
Council, and
made excuses
for not acting
to
“neutralize”
the Hutu FDLR
rebels as the
UN did the
largely Tutsi
M23.
Then
Ladsous came
to the
Security
Council
stakeout,
ostensibly to
take
questions.
Inner City
Press asked,
“On the
neutralization
of the FDLR,
what is the
hold up?”
Ladsous said
"I don't
respond to
your
questions,
Mister." Video
here and
embedded
below.
Then Ladsous
turned and
gave the
question to
Reuters, the
same trolling
correspondent.
When that back
and forth was
over, Inner
City Press
asked if any
of the
countries in
the UN's Force
Intervention
Brigade are
well than
willing to
attack the
FDLR, as
senior
diplomats at
the UN have
told Inner
City Press.
Ladsous
refused to
answer this
question, and
gestured that
Ban Ki-moon's
envoy to the
DRC Martin
Kobler,
standing
behind Ladsous
at the
stakeout,
shouldn't
answer it
either.
Reuters took
or was given
another
question,
distancing the
FDLR from
genocide.
(One
can only
imagine the
advise this
“communications
professional”
is giving
Ladsous.
Perhaps he can
help Ladsous
address his
history with
Hutu groups as
evidence in this memo.
These are
Press
questions.)