Wednesday, December 07, 2022

RWANDA SAYS INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY NOT HELPING CONGO CRISIS

Rwanda's foreign minister has accused the international community of exacerbating the crisis the Democratic Republic of Congo's east, after Washington pressed Kigali to end its alleged support for rebels in the restive region.

FILE: Rwanda's Minister of Foreign Affairs Vincent Biruta speaks during a news conference with Secretary of State Antony Blinken at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation in Kigali, Rwanda, on 11 August 2022. Picture: Andrew Harnik/POOL/AFP

AFP | 06 December 2022 11:09

KIGALI - Rwanda's foreign minister has accused the international community of exacerbating the crisis the Democratic Republic of Congo's east, after Washington pressed Kigali to end its alleged support for rebels in the restive region.

In a call to Rwandan President Paul Kagame on Sunday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said foreign support for armed groups in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) must end, "including Rwanda's assistance to M23".

Rwanda has denied repeated US-backed accounts of support for the M23 rebel group, an allegation also made by independent experts for the UN who found that Kigali was aiding and abetting the group.

The mostly Congolese Tutsi group resumed fighting in late 2021 after lying dormant for years, setting off a crisis in eastern DRC.

Rwanda's foreign minister, Vincent Biruta, said Kagame and Blinken "had good discussions... but differences in understanding of the issue remain".

"The wrong and misguided approach of the international community continues to exacerbate the problem," Biruta said in a statement late Monday.

"External interference and dictates" were undermining regional diplomatic efforts to solve the problem, he added.

Rwanda has repeatedly put the blame for DRC's crisis with its government in Kinshasa, and accuses the international community of turning a blind eye to its support for FDLR, a Congo-based rebel group pitted against Kigali.

Biruta said "the security concerns of Rwanda need to be addressed, and where others may not feel obliged to, Rwanda is and will continue to do so".

"M23 should not be equated to Rwanda. It is not Rwanda's problem to solve," he added.

Talks between DRC and Rwanda in the Angolan capital Luanda unlocked a truce agreement on November 23 but Kinshasa has subsequently accused M23 of massacring civilians despite the ceasefire.

The agreement should have also have been followed by a pullout by the M23 from territory it had seized, but this has not happened.

A separate peace initiative in Nairobi between East African officials and various rebel factions active in eastern Congo - but not the M23 - has been under way for over a week.

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