DRC: UN Arrests Politiical Leaders in Itur

    
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UN Integrated Regional Information Networks 

June 29, 2004 
Posted to the web June 29, 2004 

Kinshasa 

The UN Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUC) has arrested the 
leaders of two armed groups in the northeastern district of Ituri, according to the 
MONUC spokesman in Bunia, Rachel Eklou.

The men, who were arrested on Thursday, are Floribert Kisembo and Pitchou Iribi. 
Kisembo leads a faction of the Union des patriotes congolais (UPC, Union of Congolese 
Patriots), an armed group mainly composed of members of the Hema ethnic group. MONUC 
said Kisembo was still recruiting child soldiers.

Iribi is the acting president of the Front des nationalistes int�grationnistes (FNI, 
Nationalist Integrationist Front), made up mostly of the Lendu people. Eklou said on 
Friday that Iribi was arrested at the request of the state prosecutor and charged with 
criminal conspiracy.

On 14 May, the UPC and the FNI signed the Kinshasa Act of Commitment (Acte 
d'Engagement de Kinshasa), under UN auspices. The agreement aims at ending the 
fighting and at disarming all combatants in Ituri and reinserting them into civilian 
life.

Despite an end in 2002 to a five-year civil war, fighting continued in Ituri, 
Orientale Province, with different militia groups fighting for control of the 
mineral-rich district.

Up to 50,000 people in the district have died in the fighting since 1999, and hundreds 
of thousands of others have been displaced, according the UN figures.

Relevant Links 
 
Central Africa 
Congo-Kinshasa 
Peacekeeping and Intervention Forces 
Post-Conflict Challenges 
 
 
 
UN troops have been deployed in Ituri under a stronger mandate - Chapter Seven of the 
UN Charter - that allows them to use force, where necessary, to protect civilians, UN 
staff and other humanitarian actors.

A transitional government of national unity was installed in the capital, Kinshasa, in 
June 2003. The government has been trying to stamp its authority across the country, 
but the east, including the provinces of South and North Kivu, has remained volatile.



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