Hope but no Change:Why has President Obama abandoned the one country in Africa he promised to help?
Without a strong U.S. policy, Congo’s neighbors also have stepped into the policy void. Rwanda has emerged as a primary instigator of rebellions in Congo and a supporter of some of the most brutal militias. In 2009, theNetherlands and Sweden suspended aid to Rwanda after a report by a U.N. group of experts provided evidence of Rwanda’s support to Laurent Nkunda’s CNDP militia, which had committed gross human rights violations against the civilian population, including mass killings and rapes. Following the suspension of aid, Nkunda was arrested in a raid by the Rwandan Defense Forces. He has yet to face charges.
Today, North Kivu is in the midst of yet another rebellion by an offshoot of CNDP calling itself M23 Movement. It started as a mutiny of “former” CNDP elements integrated into DRC army led by Bosco Ntaganda, a notorious war criminal who has been indicted in absentia at The Hague and previously served as Nkunda’s deputy. Several reports, including by the U.N. Group of Experts, have linked this militia to high-ranking officials in the Kagame government. Rwanda’s continuous military adventurism in Congo has contributed to millions of deaths and exacerbated tensions between ethnic groups that once lived in relative harmony. Kagame has repeatedly denied the morbid impact of his actions on the local populations. Instead, he often blames the crisis on KingLeopoldIIofBelgium.
The United States, which maintains friendly relations with Kagame’s government, has reportedly sought to block or delay the publication of the damningpart of the U.N. investigation, undercutting Obama’s Africa strategy and his law. Impunity fuels the conflict, emboldening war criminals and destabilizing the region. In keeping with its reluctant and inequitable approach to the conflict, the State Department issued a measured communiqué urging all parties to respond constructively to the report, as if everyone were equally at fault. The United States has reportedly “quietly” asked Rwanda to halt its support to the rebellion, but the fighting goes on unabated and pushes the DRC on the verge of a greater war.
The U.S. response is neither true to its declared intention to promote peace nor the spirit of the Obama law, which seeks to end impunity. On the contrary, this prejudiced diplomacy, which has gone on for nearly two decades, sows the seed of the next round of violence and atrocities and condemns the region to perpetual instability. The United States should go farther than the Netherlands and Sweden by withholding foreign assistance to Rwanda and placing sanctions on the individuals cited in the report. Rwanda is looking to hold a rotating seat on the U.N. Security Council next year and will need U.S. support. The U.S. administration should condition its backing for Rwanda’s membership on the resolution of the current rebellion.
The DRC has to take critical steps to restore state authority and control over its territory. But without legitimacy, it is impossible for the current pro-Kabila majority to govern. The United States and other donors ought to push the Kabila government to hold free, fair, and transparent provincial elections to offset the paralyzing effect of the 2011 polls.
For now, the Obama administration is under no pressure to act. Congress does not seem to care. NGOs cannot generate enough public support. But the American resolve to promote democracy and peace in the region is being tested in Congo, and Obama’s new Africa strategy will make sense only when action backs up his words. Thankfully, Obama doesn’t need an entirely new strategy. The one he himself authored six years ago will suffice.
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/07/16/hope_but_no_change?page=0,3
Why keep blaming the US and international community?If the Congolese people feel there is a need to solve the problem once and for all,they can do it.If Congo retaliates against Kagame on Rwandan teritory,the US will have to come in and say stop to both sides.Congo should not keep shying away while they have what it takes to wage a good war against the invaders.
On the other hand,President Kabila is the one to blame because if he can benefit from that war,he will continue to behave the way Museveni behaved during the war against LRA of Joseph Kony.Museveni embezzeled billions of shillings during that war.Kabila may either be embezzeling millions of dollars or he made an arrangement with Kagame so that the latter may eploit the minerals in the Congo but help weak Kabila remain in power.
Who knows?
Kagame and his M23 are killing innocent people in order to steal the congo.Nothing else. The money he got many years are done and he needs to fill the gap by stealing. The donnors should be responsible to the actions of kagame in congo. Amanyama aterwa n’agashambara.
Yes man, Congo has everything its need to protect its territory. Congo has good furious soldiers who don’t get any support from Congo Government and have for long time survived attacks from the Rwandan Army.
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