By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
January 30,
more here
-- After the Democratic
Republic of
the Congo
sanctions
resolution
was adopted by
the UN
Security
Council, 15-0,
Rwanda's
Permanent
Representative
Gasana emerged
from the
Council
chamber. Inner
City Press
asked him
about his DRC
counterpart's
comment that
Gasana was
educated in
the Congo. Video here and embedded below.
Gasana laughed
and said he
was born in
Burundi. He
mused that the
Congolese
might want to
adopt him.
Then he turned
to go.
Wire services
Reuters
and Agence
France-Presse
pursued him to
the esclator,
where Reuters
UN bureau
chief asked
Gasana about
Rwanda being
accused of
supporting the
M23. Gasana
replied that
the DRC has
other
problems, for
example in
Katanga. He
said Rwanda is
a scapegoat
for the DRC's
wider
problems.
Reuters
insisted that
the Group of
Experts
report had
been welcomed
by the
Security
Council
resolution.
"Because they
need that,"
Gasana
replied. "This
is the raison
d'etre
of the
Security
Council."
Nothing was
asked there
about the fight in
the Council on
how to
described the
1994 genocide
and the compromise
language in
the resolution.
AFP's
outgoing
scribe was
there, but
asked nothing.
Nor when the
DRC Permanent
Representative
spoke minutes
later at the
UNTV stakeout,
in French. This is how
the UN works.
An hour later
at the UN's
noon briefing,
Inner City
Press asked
the UN's
acting deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq for
an update on any
accountability
for the mass
rapes in
Minova by
units of the
Congolese Army
the UN
supports,
and if UN
Peacekeeping,
led by Herve
Ladsous,
is
investigating
links between
the Congolese
Army and the
FDLR militia.
On this, Haq
said to look
at the
Council's
resolutions. Video here.
In the January
30 resolution,
the language
compromised on
is "the 1994
genocide
against the
Tutsi in
Rwanda, during
which Hutu and
others who
opposed the
genocide were
also killed."
Sources
exclusively
told Inner
City Press
that the
United States
resisted
calling it a
genocide
against the
Tutsi of
Rwanda, even
saying that
there is a US
policy against
referring to
it in this
way.
Inner City
Press has
asked the US
Mission to the
UN for an
explanation.
It was said
one might be
forthcoming
after the
vote.
Where
would such a
US policy be
written down?
It seemed
strange,
particularly
during a time
of Holocaust
events at the
UN, from one
about Hungary
to another
about Albania.
On
January 29,
Inner City
Press asked a
US Council
diplomat, who
said
spokespeople
would be
asked. Inner
City Press was
told to wait
for the
language to be
final, then,
for the vote.
In the
Council's
January 29
debate, the
representative
of the DRC
spoke about
Rwanda and the
M23 rebels.
Rwanda's
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
replied with a
series of
questions: was
it Rwanda who
killed
Lumumba? Was
Rwanda
responsible
for Mobutu?
Who hosted and
failed to
separate the genocidaires from
Rwanda in
1994?
This continued
on January 30
after the
vote.
Rwanda
Permanent
Representative
Gasana said UN
Peacekeeping
should
investigate
links between
the DRC Army
and the FDLR.
The DRC
representative
asked to be
given
specifics
about links
between his
country's army
the FARDC and
the FDLR
militia. The resolution
voted on
provides: