![]() Date: 2025-08-21 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00003687 | |||||||||
Country ... DRC | |||||||||
Burgess COMMENTARY | |||||||||
Fuelling the DR Congo conflict A leaked UN report has implicated Rwanda and Uganda in a regional unrest but who really benefits from the instability?
Rwanda and Uganda have been accused of backing a new rebellion in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo), according to a leaked UN report. The UN Security Council's Group of Experts in the report says the uprising is being commanded by James Kabarebe, the Rwandan defence minister. 'This is not a judgement; this is not the final word. This is just simply a list of accusations that will not stand scrutiny in the lowest imaginable court of law... This report has zero credibility, it is nonsense. There is no evidence at all, just hearsay - second- or third-hand witnesses... ' - Olivier Nduhunigirehe, a Rwandan diplomatBoth governments have denied supporting the M23 armed group, who are battling the Congolese government. The DR Congo, wracked by conflict and corruption, seems unable to shake free from the cycle of violence. The confidential report says both countries have sent weapons and troops to support the M23 rebels and the group's leader receives military orders directly from Rwanda. The UN group, which monitors compliance with sanctions and an arms embargo on the DR Congo, delivered the report to the Security Council's Congo sanctions committee earlier this month. M23 fighters have been waging a six-month fight against the Congolese army in North Kivu province. The UN believes both Rwanda and Uganda jointly supported a series of attacks in July, in which a UN peacekeeper was killed. 'Of course these are very serious findings and it’s a very serious thing for a defence minister to be found responsible for such activities. Is it a surprise? Well, as you mentioned, there is some history of support for rebellions… These are alarming developments.' - Fred Robarts, a former member of the UN Group of Experts on DRCThe key players in the ongoing conflict are:
To answer these questions presenter Dareen Abughaida is joined by guests: Olivier Nduhunigirehe, a Rwandan diplomat and first counsellor to Rwanda's permanent mission to the UN; Fred Robarts, a former co-ordinator of the UN Group of Experts on the DR Congo, who is based in Congo for six years and has worked for the UNDP, ICRC and Human Rights Watch; and Kris Berwouts, a political analyst and historian specialising in central Africa. FACTS ABOUT THE DR CONGO:
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