Wednesday, January 07, 2009

DRC News Update: Nkunda Rebel Dissident Committed 'Treason', Says Spokesman

Nkunda rebel dissident committed 'treason': spokesman

Wednesday, January 7

GOMA, DR Congo (AFP) - - Laurent Nkunda is still in charge of DR Congo's rebel movement and a rival who challenged his authority will be charged with "high treason", a spokesman said Tuesday as splits emerged in the movement.

Chief of staff General Bosco Ntaganda said in a statement released on Monday that Nkunda had been dismissed as leader of the National Congress for the Defence of the People (CNDP) for "poor leadership" and "bad governance".

But another top officer, Seraphin Mirindi, told AFP that Nkunda was still head of the rebel movement, which would meet Tuesday to discuss Ntaganda's fate.

Later however, he said that meeting had been put off until Wednesday.

"The movement is not at the service of one individual," Mirindi said earlier Tuesday. "It remains as it was and it is functioning normally," said Lieutenant-Colonel Seraphin Mirindi.

Nkunda himself was to attend the disciplinary meeting in the Rutshuru area of Nord-Kivu in the east of the country, around 60 kilometres (40 miles) north of the provincial capital Goma.

To underline Nkunda's authority, Mirindi said a rebel delegation had already left for the Kenyan capital Nairobi for another round of UN-brokered peace negotiations to begin Wednesday.

Those talks were suspended in December when UN mediator Olusegun Obasanjo said the rebel delegation lacked the authority to make concessions.

Meanwhile, Ntaganda himself had called his own meeting of senior officers close to him in the Mushaki area, in the rebel fiefdom of Masisi, a member of his entourage said.

The general "is currently in consultation with the military chiefs of the CNDP," the source said, adding that the meeting "will allow us to see how the chiefs of staff are going to run the CNDP while awaiting new instructions".

The report that Nkunda had been replaced had been denied within hours late Monday by Nkunda's number two, Colonel Makinga Sultani.

"There's no change in the CNDP. Laurent Nkunda is still chairman. There has not been any leadership change in the movement, the power in CNDP still rests with Nkunda," Sultani told AFP.

Nkunda, a former general in the regular army, has headed the ethnic Tutsi rebel movement in DR Congo since it was set up in 2006.

His rebels have been camped a few kilometres north of Goma since seizing control of a large swathe of eastern Nord Kivu province from government forces in a major offensive in October, which left more than 250,000 people homeless and sparked fears of a wider conflict.

Ntaganda was embroiled in a similar controversy in October, when a statement announcing Nkunda's death was purportedly signed by the general. Despite this, Ntaganda kept his job as Nkunda's chief of staff.

The CNDP's chief of military staff is normally resident in Kabati, in the mountainous Masisi region northwest of Goma, where for some time he has spearheaded opposition to Nkunda's dominance of the movement. Nkunda has been based mainly in the Rutshuru area in recent months.

Ntaganda is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC), which issued a warrant for his arrest for recruiting child soldiers for the rebel movement in the province of Ituri, northeastern DR Congo, between 2002 and 2003.

More recently, during the rebel offensive in October, Ntaganda commanded rebel forces responsible for the massacre of more than 150 people in the Nord Kivu town of Kiwanja, an action which has reportedly deepened a rift with Nkunda.

Meanwhile, the leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics, Pope Benedict XVI, appealed to armed groups in eastern DR Congo to release children who have been "wrenched from their families" to act as soldiers.

The pope said in a message to coincide with the Feast of the Epiphany that he wanted to draw attention to "the dozens of children and adolescents who have been abducted in recent months" in eastern Congo.

On Tuesday, British International Development Secretary Douglas Alexander arrived in DR Congo to help encourage a peace deal between the CNDP and the government of President Joseph Kabila.

2 comments:

MJPC BLOG said...

Petition Calling on UN (MONUC) to arrest NTAGANDA wantedWanted by the ICC

The UN in Congo(MONUC) is not doing enough to arrest NTAGANDA for his committed war crimes


The Mobilization for Justice and Peace in D.R. Congo (MJPC) announced today that it has launched a new online petition that can be signed at http://www.gopetition.com.au/online/24459.html asking concerned citizens around the world to demand MONUC to take concrete actions to arrest Bosco Ntaganda wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes.

MONUC is currently the largest UN peacekeeping mission in the world with more than 17,600 uniformed personnel from 58 countries with an annual budget of more than $1bn.

In April 2008, the International Criminal Court (ICC) unsealed the warrant of arrest against Mr. NTAGANDA whic was first issued on 22 August 2006 by Pre-Trial Chamber I. The Chamber concluded that there were reasonable grounds to believe that from July 2002 to end of December 2003, Mr. NTAGANDA had played an essential role in enlisting and conscripting children under the age of fifteen years into the FPLC and using them to participate actively in hostilities.

According to Amede KYUBWA, Executive Director of MJPC, "concerned citizens around the world are being asked to contribute to the arrest of NTAGANDA by putting pressure on MONUC to take whatever necessary actions to arrest this war criminal." He decried MONUC's failure to take appropriate action to arrest him despite evidence showing that they know his whereabouts. MJPC urges MONUC to treat those who have committed war crimes in Congo as criminals and refrain from helping them to be appointed to high governmental posts. "rewarding war criminals with the governmental posts does nothing else than promoting more war criminals, preventing justice to thousands of victims including children and women who have suffered at the hands of these criminals and it shamefully contradicts directly the values and principles of the U.N" said Mr. KYUBWA

As part of its global campaign to help end the cycle of violence and impunity in Congo, MJPC lounched it first online petition in November 2008 calling for MONUC to immediately arrest notorious war criminal NKUNDA which can still be signed http://www.gopetition.com/online/23604.html. So far more than 1085 people have signed the petition, including those from Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, USA, Kenya, Rwanda, France, German, Denmark, Sweden, Germany, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, the Philippines, South Africa, Malawi, Burundi, Senegal, Nigeria, Spain, Japan, the UK, Venezuela, Itali, Ethiopia, China, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, and Uganda.

About the MJPC.
MJPC seeks to add a voice in advocating for justice and peace in the Democratic Republic of the Congo particulary in the east of the D.R. Congo where thousands innocent civilian including children and women continue to suffer massive human rights violations while armed groups responsible for these crimes go unpunished. Visit the Online Museum of Victims of War in Congo in Congo at http://www.yoursilenceoncongo.org to see the unacceptable barbarity that you could help stop by signing the petition. For more information on MJPC and the activities, visit the wbsite www.mjpcongo.org. or call Amede Kyubwa @ 916 753 5717. The online petitions can be signed at the following addresses: for arresting NKUNDA at http://www.gopetition.com/online/23604.html and arresting NTAGANDA at http://www.gopetition.com.au/online/24459.html

MJPC BLOG said...

What is the ICC waiting for to issue an arrest warrant against Nkunda?”

The Mobilization for Justice and Peace in the D.R. Congo (MJPC) today called on the International Criminal Court (ICC) to issue an arrest warrant against laurent Nkunda accused of multiple war crimes and crimes against humanity which are well documented by various human right organzations including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. Laurent Nkunda, former leader of the National Congress for the Defence of the People (CNDP) armed group, was arrested on 22 January and is detained at an undisclosed location in Rwanda.

How long would it take for the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), Luis Moreno-Ocampo to decide whether or not to issue an arrest warrant against Nkunda? echoed Makuba Sekombo, Director of Community Affairs of MJPC. The ICC Prosecutor has been investigating war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) since since 2004, but the ICC reportdely opened an investigation into alleged war crimes committed in the DRC since 1 July 2002.

Nkunda has been repeatedly implicated in numerous serious war crimes and crimes against humanity since 2002. In September 2005, the Congolese government issued an arrest warrant for Nkunda, accusing him of numerous war crimes and crimes against human rights. Human Rights Watch, for example, which has been calling for his arrest for war crimes and crimes against humanity since February 2006 and has documented summary executions, torture and rape committed by soldiers under the command of Nkunda in Bukavu in 2004 and in Kisangani in 2002. Also armed groups loyal to warlord Nkunda have been repeatedly accused of using rape as a weapon of war and the recruitment of child soldiers, some as young as 12 after the abduction from their homes. In November 2008, the UN mission in the country (MONUC), Humn Rights Watch many other organizations accused Nkunda of war crimes in November 2008; an estimated 150 people were killed innoncently in the town of Kiwanja by the troups loyal to Nkunda.

The MJPC deplores the refusal by the Government of Rwanda to hand over Nkunda for trial. “How shocking that Rwanda which has been receiving assistance from the International community to arrest genocide suspects and hand them over to the ICTR or to Rwanda would not allow for the extradition of a war criminal accused of massacring civilians, sexual violence, abduction of civilians, including children forcibly recruited as fighters and then used to attack civilian communities” said Mr. Sekombo.

“While Nkunda is not the only one who committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, the ICC arrest warrant would mark a major step in promoting accountability for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in DRC, added Sekombo. As part of its campaign to combat impunity in DRC, MJPC launched an online petition in November 2008 whic can be signed at http://www.gopetition.com/online/23604.html calling for immediate arrest of Nkunda. So far more than 1365 people from over 50 countries have signed the petition.
About MJPC
MJPC works to add a voice in advocating for justice and peace in the DRC particulary in the east of DRC where thousands innocent civilian including children and women continue to suffer massive human rights violations while armed groups responsible for these crimes go unpunished.

For more information about MJPC and its activities, visit http://www.mjpcongo.org. or call Makuba Sekombo @ 1 408 806 3644. or e-mail: info@mjpcongo.org . The online petitions calling for the arrest can be signed at http://www.gopetition.com/online/23604.html