On
DRC, Feingold
Goes on Road,
But When Will
FDLR Be Targeted?
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
March 4 -- A
week after US
Special Envoy
on the Great
Lakes Russ
Feingold
called for the
UN to "soon"
neutralize the
Hutu FDLR
militia, for
its own
credibility,
the US just
announced that
Feingold will
travel
to
London
and The Hague
this week to
meet with
donor
partners,
including with
the Great
Lakes Contact
Group. He
intends to
discuss next
steps in
supporting the
Peace,
Security, and
Cooperation
Framework
peace
process,
including
Angola's
facilitation
of a regional
dialogue
during its
chairmanship
of the
International
Conference on
the Great
Lakes Region,
implementation
of the Nairobi
Declarations,
and
Uganda's
alarming
Anti-Homosexuality
Law. The
Contact Group
will
also discuss
support for
reform efforts
in the DRC and
for upcoming
elections in
the Great
Lakes region,
among other
topics.
Special
Envoy
Feingold will
then travel to
Rwanda where
he will meet
with
government
officials and
visit
Congolese
refugee
populations
and to
North Kivu,
DRC, where he
will focus on
issues related
to armed
groups as well
as community
reconciliation
and
peace-building
initiatives.
Sounds good --
but what about
the FDLR? Back
in February,
Inner City
Press asked
the UN
spokesperson
when this will
start.
Outgoing
spokesperson
Martin Nesirky
responded that
he would not
answer about
"operational
activities
that have not
yet started
and that might
not start."
Given previous
UN statements
that it was
only a
question of
"when," this
"might not
start" line
triggered a
follow up
question.
Will the UN in
fact only go
after the FDLR
if the
Congolese Army
does so?
Spokesperson
Nesirky said
that "there is
always going
to be a level
of
coordination,"
and that "this
is turning
into a little
bit of an
interview
here."
But shouldn't
the questions
be answered?
Also in the
Senate Foreign
Relations
Committee on
February
25, not
only Feingold
and Ben
Affleck
testified --
they were
joined by
former UN
envoy Roger
Meece.
When Meece was
in charge of
the UN Mission
MONUSCO, there
were questions
including
raised by
Ambassador
Susan Rice
about failing
to protect the
victims of the
Walikale mass
rapes,
following by a
failed project
Inner City
Press dubbed
"Meece's
mills."
Affleck on
February 26
praised
Meece's tenure
at MONUSCO,
perhaps being
diplomatic --
but he also
called for
MONUSCO to
sunset, to at
long last
finish. It's
similar to
calls in Haiti
that the
MINUSTAH
mission be
dissolved and
the funds be
devoted to
combating the
cholera the UN
brought to the
island.
Affleck talked
up a kind of
organic
chocolate bar
-- for sale at
Whole Foods,
he added --
calling it the
"magic of
capitalism."
This goes over
big in the US
Senate;
Senator Flake
called it
bipartisan,
and both sides
(and Affleck)
praised Cindy
McCain.
Back on
February 25,
"Sexual
Violence in
Conflict" was
the topic of
US Secretary
of State John
Kerry and his
UK counterpart
William Hague.
One hoped for
an update on
or at least
mention of the
more
than 100 rapes
by the
Congolese Army
in Minova in
November 2012.
Instead the
news was Kerry
saying that
there will be
no US visas
for those who
perpetrate or
order sexual
violence in
conflict
zones.
OK,
here's a place
to start:
the US-trained
391st
Battalion of
the Congolese
Army FARDC,
which took
part in the
mass rape at
Minova.
That was more
than 14 months
ago, and yet
at today's
press
conference by
the UN Mission
in the Congo
MONUSCO, it
was reported
that in the
already
delayed
interview of
victims in
Minova,
interviewers
spoke with
barely a
quarter of the
more than 200
listed
victims. Still
no justice. So
will there be
visas? This is
a test case --
for outcome if
any of the
Affleck -
Kerry - Russ
Feingold talks
as well.
Yesterday's
Kerry - Hague
transcript
mentioned
"DRC" five
times, and
"Congo" three,
but there was
nothing on
Minova.
Instead, the
implication is
that all the
rapes in
Eastern Congo
are by the M23
-- not the
FDLR, much
less the
Congolese
Army, which
the US
supports.
In fact the 391st
Battalion, one
of two charged
with the
Minova rapes,
was trained by
the United
States. (Click
here for
comment the US
Mission to the
UN
provided to
Inner City
Press, which
also first
reported that
Ambassador
Samantha Power
raised Minova
to Joseph
Kabila in
October.)
So maybe a
Minova update
next time? Or
on February
26, when Kerry
meets Great
Lakes envoy
Russ Feingold
as well as Ben
Affleck? From
the February
25 transcript
Secretary
of
State Kerry:
"In the Great
Lakes region,
we have just –
in the
Democratic
Republic of
Congo, where
M23 was
active, in the
Kampala
Accord, which
Special Envoy
Russ Feingold
and Mary
Robinson from
the United
Nations and
others were
engaged in
helping to
negotiate, we
have a section
in there that
specifically
talks about
accountability
and prevention
of rape as a
tool of – and
holding people
accountable in
M23 for these
acts."
Back on
January 13,
after UN envoy
Martin Kobler
told the
Security
Council about
"the need to
address
ill-discipline
within the
[Congolese
Army] FARDC
and National
Police and to
pursue all
outstanding
cases of
misconduct,"
Inner City
Press asked
him about the
FARDC's mass
rapes at
Minova in
November 2012.
Kobler
acknowledged
that the most
recent hearing
in the Minova
case had been
postponed,
that witness
statements
have still not
been taken. Video
here, from
Minute 6:32.
Given that the
UN says it has
a Human Rights
Due Diligence
Policy of not
supporting
army units
engaged in
abuses, how
much longer
will the UN
accept this?
Thirteen
months and
counting.
Perhaps
relatedly,
after rumors
of the death
of Rwanda's
Paul Kagame
were shot
down, across
the border in
the Eastern
Congo, a time-stamped
photograph
was tweeted
of a UN truck
full of people
on the back,
captioned
"MONUSCO in
Goma
celebrating
the death of
Pres Paul
Kagame."
It seemed
worth asking
the UN mission
chief Martin
Kobler to
comment on or
explain the
photograph,
and Inner City
Press sent
this, to
Kobler and
three MONUSCO
spokespeople:
"Please
comment
on / explain
this
time-stamped
photo, which
is being
described as a
UN truck
participating
in
"celebrations"
of the rumor
of the Rwandan
president's
death. Do
you
dispute that
the photo was
taken on
January 10? To
whom is the UN
giving a ride
in this truck
/ photo? In
what context?"
After
a time, UN
envoy Kobler
replied:
"@innercitypress
Ceci apparait
de toute
évidence comme
une
utilisation
frauduleuse
d'un véhicule
de la
#Monusco.
C'est
inacceptable"
Translated:
"This appears
clearly as a
fraudulent use
of a vehicle
of the
#Monusco. This
is
unacceptable."
(Translation
not by Google,
not only
because of NSA
spying issues
but also acquiescence
in Digital
Millennium
Copyright Act
abuse by
Reuters UN
bureau, click
here for that.)
The question
became, now
what does
Kobler, or
those above
him in New
York,
do?
Inner City
Press on
January 10
went to Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
press
conference,
11 am in New
York, to ask
this question:
"in the DRC
this morning,
after false
rumors of Paul
Kagame being
dead, a
MONUSCO truck
was
photographed
in what some
call
celebrations
and Martin
Kobler told me
is
"unacceptable."
What do you
think your UN
should do
about this, in
terms of the
perception of
impartiality
or bias by the
UN?"
But Ban's acting
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq did
not call
on Inner City
Press, instead
automatically
giving the
first question
to the United
Nations
Correspondents
Association
(a/k/a
UN's
Censorship
Alliance),
then mostly
questions soft
on the UN
about Syria.
Next came spin
from MONUSCO,
e-mailed to
the Press:
Fraudulent
use of MONUSCO
truck in Goma
Kinshasa, 10
January 2014 -
MONUSCO is
aware of a
photo being
circulated on
the internet
showing a
MONUSCO truck
in Goma during
a
demonstration.
In reality,
the truck was
taken over by
demonstrators
while on a
regular
mission. The
driver was
alone and
unarmed when
the incident
happened.
MONUSCO
condemns this
agressivity
against its
assets.
MONUSCO has
launched a
full
investigation
to ascertain
the
circumstances
and the
context
surrounding
the incident.
But how does
the UN
explain, then,
this UN jeep
or Four by
Four in this
longer video
of the
anti-Kagame
protests,
from Minute
1:04 to 1:54?
http://youtu.be/L9EPcUOpT1M
On
January 13,
Inner City
Press asked
Kobler about
the two
vehicles. He
said that both
had been taken
over, which
now seems to
mean that the
UN drivers
remained in
the vehicles,
carrying the
protesters, on
the single
road from Sake
to Munigi,
through Goma.
Kobler
said the
drivers were
unarmed, but
even if armed
would not have
tried to get
the
demonstrators
off, at least
not be using
force. He said
the protesters
got off or
disappeared
out by the
Uruguayan
peacekeepers'
base by the
airport. There
is more than a
little
skepticism.
But that is
what Kobler
said: video
here, from
Minute 6:32.
Watch this
site.
* * *
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are
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News and on Lexis-Nexis.
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for Sept 26, 2011 New Yorker on Inner City
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