Wednesday, December 16, 2009

United Nations to End Democratic Republic of Congo Operations

Thursday, December 17, 2009
05:43 Mecca time, 02:43 GMT

UN to end DR Congo operation

Congolese soldiers backed by the UN have been accused of carrying out war crimes

A controversial United Nations-backed operation in the Democratic Republic of Congo that is reported to have claimed hundreds of civilian lives will be wrapped up by year's end, a senior UN envoy has said.

Speaking to the Security Council on Wednesday, Alan Doss, the UN special envoy to the Congo said the objective of the Kimia II operation against Rwandan Hutu rebels in eastern Congo "has been largely achieved although we do recognise that there have been very serious humanitarian consequences."

Doss' briefing took place as the Security Council discusses renewing of the mandate for the UN peacekeeping force, known as MONUC, which has been in Congo since 1999.

Addressing the council, Doss said the Rwandan Hutu militia, known as the FDLR, remained a "potent threat".

"They will seek to return to their former strongholds and punish the population for collaboration with government forces, if they are allowed to do so," he said.

Many FDLR rebels fled to eastern Congo after participating in the 1994 genocide in neighbouring Rwanda that killed more than 500,000 people.

Subsequent fighting ballooned into back-to-back civil wars from 1996 to 2002 that drew in other neighbouring countries in a rush to plunder the DR Congo's massive mineral wealth.

The UN maintains the world's largest peacekeeping force in the DR Congo with some 19,000 so-called blue helmets deployed in the country.

But amid mounting allegations of war crimes by the Congoloese army in the country's east, the Security Council is reconsidering its mandate in the country.

On Monday a report by New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said the offensive had led to more than 1,400 civilians murdered this year by both Congolese troops and rebels.

According to the report Congolese soldiers, supported and fed by the UN, gang-raped girls and cut the heads off some young men accused of being rebels or supporting the enemy.

Anneke van Woudenberg, HRW's senior researcher in the DR Congo told Al Jazeera the group had documented widespread attacks on civilians, including an increase in sexual violence.

"As long as the Congolese Army is continuing to commit war crimes then UN peacekeepers, through their support of these soldiers – are themselves violating the laws of war," she said.

Source: Agencies

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