Rwanda: Breaking Up the DR Congo is the Only Solution to the Insanity There



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Focus Media (Kigali)

OPINION
12 November 2008
Posted to the web 21 November 2008

Yet another session of hand-wringing talks about conflicts in the Congo has
taken place. This was the one day regional summit in Nairobi last Friday,
whose so-called purpose was to address the current fighting in the DR Congo.

Facing off: General Laurent Nkunda and DRC President Joseph Kabila (Internet
photos)
  In attendance were several regional heads of state-the presidents of
Rwanda, DR Congo, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Burundi and Congo Brazzaville.
Also talking was UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon. As was Jean Ping,
Secretary General of the African Union. As was Jendayi Frazer, US Assistant
Secretary of State for African Affairs.

We cannot list all the notable dignitaries present to wring their hands over
the latest impending humanitarian crisis in the Congo. They were very many.

As usual when all one is required to do is talk you will find many parties
willing to participate. Think about it: how much money and people's time was
wasted on this palaver?

The summit ended with a call for "tougher measures to end the conflict."
Wow!

One of the more notable statements was: "the importance of implementing
earlier agreements immediately, especially the Nairobi communiqué of
November 2007 which called on the DRC to disarm and repatriate rebels of the
FDLR".

Presumably the FDLR were quaking in their pants. But I am not betting on
that.

Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete went one better. He "strongly called" for
the immediate disarmament of the FDLR.

Who exactly was the man talking to? Congolese Joseph Kabila who had an
expression of utter boredom the whole time? The UN "peacekeeping force"
MONUC which has proved more adept at trading arms with the FDLR for gold and
other precious minerals?

Now consider this for a moment. The very important people gathered in
Nairobi are fully aware that FDLR-that charming umbrella group of people

(Interahamwe, ex FAR, Magrevi, Ibiswikiri etc etc) whose main aim in life
was, and is to massacre anyone whose offence is to have been born a
Tutsi-effectively call the shots in eastern Congo.

Those dignitaries jaw jawing in Nairobi know the FDLR long ago took over
swathes of eastern Congo with the full knowledge of Kabila, and his father
before him and Mobutu Sese Seko before both of them.

They know Kabila knows even if he wanted to he could never disarm the FDLR.
The Congolese army basically has always been a motley collection of
ill-disciplined, cowardly thugs who turn tail and run at the first sound of
gunfire and whose main skill is to rape and loot helpless civilians.

Actually it looks like Kabila knows the only people he can rely on to fight
for him in the crunch are the FDLR, so instead of disarming them he does the
exact opposite-he makes sure they are armed to the teeth.

Everyone knows these things, but they carry on with their pretense of
"holding talks". As usual. They hold talks because in reality that is all
they can do.

Congolese themselves have to find a solution to their horrors (and here we
are talking about other Congolese, not Kabila and his government who very
much are part of the problem).

*Problem neighbors*

The Congo is a terrible mess. At this newspaper we like to call a spade a
spade and there is no other way to candidly describe our giant neighbor to
the West.

The country is an irreversible mess and no amount of talking in Nairobi or
anywhere else will ever change the fact. The country has always been a mess,
with a capital M and-unless Congolese do something wholly new; something
breathtakingly revolutionary, creative and daring-it always will be a mess.

One feels for that country's long-suffering citizens; one feels deeply for
them. No people should suffer the way Congolese do.

Impoverished Congolese die by the tens of thousands each year from the
atrocities of low-intensity rebel conflicts and attendant problems like
starvation, lack of medicine, exposure to the elements and so on. The
suffering of this Sub-Saharan African country is an ever in-your-face
reminder of the region's status as the world's basket case.
 Relevant Links

   - Central Africa <http://allafrica.com/centralafrica/>
   - Conflict, Peace and Security <http://allafrica.com/conflict/>
   - Congo-Kinshasa <http://allafrica.com/congo_kinshasa/>
   - Rwanda <http://allafrica.com/rwanda/>

Of course there are African countries striving to transcend basket-case
status. However one of the big problems with our part of the world is that
even those societies trying to steer from insane situations to become
well-functioning states tend to have problem neighbors always ready to
export their chaos and bring everyone down with them
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