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For Immediate Release: August 27, 2004
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC): Unrealistic Expectations, Inhuman Conditions
The international community must immediately reassess its priorities, revise its
expectations, and demonstrate greater commitment and transparency in reversing
the decade of warfare, sexual violence and dehumanization of civilians, and in
dismantling networks of corruption, arms smuggling and international
racketeering, in the Great Lakes region of Africa.
Survivors' Rights International (SRI) in the strongest of terms reiterates its
call to the international community to reverse the climate of impunity and
lawlessness in the DRC, to demand governments and other warring parties to order
their soldiers to stop committing acts of genocide and crimes against humanity,
to protect civilians and refugees, and to withdraw troops that remain in DRC
(verified in July 2004 by the United Nations Group of Experts on DRC) in
contravention of international peace agreements.
SRI believes that expectations held by the international community and regional
and foreign governments and the respective actions and inaction of these
governments ostensibly supporting the transition from war to democracy and
the concomitant disarmament and regional peace in Central Africa, demonstrate a
lack of sincerity, transparency and commitment that will defeat rather than
support both the expressed international objectives of peace and accountability
in DRC and the United Nations Observer Mission (MONUC) there.
The August 13, 2004 massacres at Gatumba refugee camp in Burundi underscore the
continued failure of the international community and United Nations to protect
refugees and civilians, disarm combatants and prevent atrocities. Noting the
prevalence of conflicting reports about the military and political status (and
agendas) of the alleged perpetrators and victims, SRI calls for an immediate and
impartial investigation into the recent massacres and institutional failure at
Gatumba, Burundi.
The continued military presence in the DRC of armed insurgents hostile to the
governments of Paul Kagame and Yoweri Museveni especially
Interahamwe and ex-FAR (Forces Armee Rwanda) militants alleged to have
participated in genocide in Rwanda in 1994 provide legitimate threats to
Rwanda and Uganda. However, SRI questions the sincerity of international efforts
seeking voluntary demobilization, disarmament and repatriation of these and other
factions hostile to DRC's neighbors in the face of the likely
marginalization/persecution of these forces by the exclusive single-party regimes
of Rwanda and Uganda.
Further, SRI deplores the tendency by human rights and humanitarian organizations
to universally attribute all members of the external forces and political
movements hostile to or excluded by the one-party regimes of Uganda and Rwanda
with complicity in "terrorism" and "genocide". These attributions are
particularly remarkable given the atrocities committed by Uganda People's Defense
Forces (UPDF) and the Rwanda Defense Forces (RDF, formerly Rwanda Patriotic Army)
in the region. SRI calls on the International Criminal Court to investigate acts
of genocide and crimes against humanity committed by all parties, including UPDF
and RDF troops and their leadership, inside and outside of DRC. Further, SRI
calls for an investigation of alleged RDF and Interahamwe collaboration in
natural resources profiteering from DRC.
Given the clear patterns of atrocities committed against civilians in both DRC
and Rwanda, SRI seriously questions the wisdom and motivation of the deployment
of some 154 Rwanda Defense Force Green Berets to Darfur, Sudan. (SRI believes
that the conflict in Darfur is not inseparable from greater political realities
in Central Africa, Chad, and on the Horn, and while SRI deplores in the strongest
of terms the failure of the international community to mitigate the Darfur
crises, SRI views the RDF presence as inappropriate.)
SRI has received fresh reports from DRC of mass rapes and other crimes against
humanity recently and brazenly committed by soldiers in Equateur, Orientale and
the Kivus. For example, on July 21, 2004, Forces Armee Congolese (FAC) soldiers
openly raped some 24 women and girls at the Mbandaka airport, Equateur province;
one woman was raped by 10 soldiers; one 13 year-old girl was raped by three
soldiers. Incidents of mass rape and sexual slavery continue to occur with
impunity in the unstable Ituri and Kivu regions.
Hence SRI again (see SRI Press Release June 6, 2004) urges in the strongest of
terms that all parties demand the immediate release of women and girls who have
been abducted and who remain captive sexual slaves to government soldiers and
affiliated militias, to arrest the perpetrators, and investigate the complicity
of military leaders and government officials in condoning or participating in the
widespread sexual violence, including rapes, torture, disappearances and
abductions of women and girls.
Warring parties allegedly involved in atrocities, extortion and/or racketeering
of minerals, wildlife and timber include: government forces of DRC, Rwanda,
Burundi and Uganda; Sudan PeopleÕs Liberation Army (SPLA); Democratic Forces for
the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR); Army for the Liberation of Rwanda (ALIR);
Congolese Rally for Democracy (RCD); Lord's Resistance Army (LRA); Allied
Democratic Forces (ADF) Uganda; National Forces of Liberation (FNL) Burundi, and
other militias and factions in the region.
SRI commends the Zimbabwe and South Africa governments for the recent arrests of
individuals suspected of mercenary activities in Central Africa. Noting the
recent statement by the lawyers of mercenary suspect Simon Mann that the
procurement of weapons in Zimbabwe was intended to be used "to secure diamond
mining operations in DRC," SRI calls on the International Criminal Court to
appoint a special commission of inquiry into the mercenary activities of the
affiliates of Simon Mann involved in mining and mercenary activities in Uganda,
Rwanda, Central African Republic, Congo-Brazzaville, Angola, Namibia and DRC.
In particular, SRI calls for a complete and transparent investigation of the
award of petroleum and diamond concessions to corporations Heritage Oil & Gas,
Branch Energy and Diamond Works in Central Africa. The relationship between the
vast Semiliki Basin petroleum concessions (both DRC and Uganda) controlled by
Heritage Oil & Gas and the destabilization and factional warfare in the Ituri
region are of particular concern.
SRI calls on all regional governments and the governments of the United States,
Canada, the European Union, Australia, Japan and South Africa to investigate and
make transparent the relationships between private military companies and
international mining conglomerates in the Central Africa region.
SRI is aware of recent cases where local or regional authorities challenged with
upholding human decency and the rule of law have demonstrated their capacity to
mitigate violence, identify and hold perpetrators accountable, and locate missing
or abducted men, women and children. SRI believes that all parties can therefore
immediately mitigate the ongoing violence and impunity and hold the perpetrators
to account.
For further information please contact Survivor's Rights International
researcher: Keith Harmon Snow at email:
ksnow_srintl@yahoo.com;
or telephone: 413-268-7458.
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