My opinion is that I do agree with the Rwandan President, the community of vultures or International community is trying hard blackmailing Rwanda about the mess in eastern DRC. I am positive, Rwanda will hold its ground, it's simplistic of both Kin and their allies to think that accusing Rwanda baselessly will solve the poor governance in DRC or the corrupt army, and much less the State failure.
The views of the journalist in the following article:
Eastern DRC is a complex security puzzle for Rwanda and too far flung for Kinshasa to control
Soldiers
of the Democratic Republic of Congo Armed Forces stand outside a
general’s residence in Goma on April 11, during a meeting called by the
chief of staff of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Lt-Gen Didier Etumba
Longila, in Goma. Picture: AFP
The EastAfrican’s story, “Kagame’s Threat To Release Nkunda Poses Congo War Risk”,
(June 25-July 1), points to a bigger problem — just how much the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has become a near-intractable dilemma
for Rwanda and the region.
As
fighting flared up between Tutsi rebels and government forces in
eastern DRC, the Rwanda government found itself, again, at the centre of
yet another international controversy.
Kinshasa
has been joined by international observers, “experts” and local and
international human rights groups in a blanket condemnation of Kigali as
the mastermind of the rebellion. In the rush to point fingers and
apportion blame, the complexity of the problem in eastern DRC has been
lost, making a solution much more difficult to craft.
Eastern
DRC presents a complex puzzle to the top leadership of the Rwanda
government’s security, military, political and diplomatic establishment.
DRC has largely been an absentee state in most of its territory. But
this problem is much more pronounced in the eastern region.
Because
power abhors a vacuum, the absence of even rudimentary infrastructure
for basic administrative and security functions of the state has created
conditions for the emergence of war lords commanding local militias to
fill the void. But because of its own complex history and land ownership
wrangles, most of the emergent militias are ethnic based. They emerged
primarily to defend the land rights of one community against another.
To
extend its administrative reach and try to be institutionally present
in most of eastern Congo, the central government in Kinshasa has often
signed agreements recognising these militias and their control of those
specific areas.
Warlords
become governors and military commanders. But it also means that the
government in Kinshasa has little effective control over its appointees.
The state in Congo is therefore a mosaic of ethnic chieftains led by
belligerent overlords.
President
Joseph Kabila is more a “war lord-in-chief” than a commander-in-chief.
Hence, Kinshasa can issue orders and threats; but local commanders are
at liberty to disregard or accept them — making the governance of DRC
even more difficult.
And
this is how the recent flare up in eastern DRC began. Kinshasa accused
CNDP (the Tutsi militia) commanders of refusing to deploy troops as it
had instructed them to. This is unusual since commanders should obey,
not question orders. Refusal is tantamount to mutiny. CNDP argues that
they are not sure of their security if deployed in other areas. They
claim that 50 of their soldiers who were deployed out of the eastern
region were all killed in cold blood. Kinshasa has promised a commission
of inquiry to establish what actually happened but nothing has come of
it — yet.
Bosco
Ntanganda, a Congolese Tutsi and leader of the CNDP (now M23), is an
indicted war criminal by the International Criminal Court (ICC). In its
naivety, and ignorance, the international community has been putting
pressure on an impotent Kabila to arrest him. Perhaps it is in response
to this pressure that Kabila issued orders transferring commanders
hoping to separate Ntanganda from his troops, orders M23 rejected.
Technically, that amounted to a mutiny and Kinshasa responded by
launching an offensive against M23 hence the current fighting.
Although
Tutsi militias are the main focus of news and international diplomatic
activity, they are not the only ones. There are other commanders and
warlords in eastern Congo who are in rebellion against Kinshasa. They
claim to defend their communities against hostile neighbours.
In
fact, in a strange twist of fate, some of the Tutsi militias in Congo
have allied with Hutu militias to fight the Kinshasa government. This is
because for some local communities in eastern DRC, there is no
distinction between Hutu and Tutsi. They see both of them as Banyarwanda
because they share a common language, culture and came from “the same
place.”
This
brings us to Rwanda’s regional dilemma. In part of eastern DRC is the
FDLR, an extremist Hutu rebel group that has anything between 4,000 and
6,000 troops under its command. One of its missions is to overthrow the
Kigali government; the other to exterminate all Tutsi.
It
has allied with some local communities in DRC to fight the “Tutsi
scourge,” a factor that gives FDLR daunting political weight. FDLR does
not distinguish the Tutsi of Congo from those from Rwanda. This has
created an automatic alliance between FDLR and other eastern Congolese
communities hostile to the Tutsi. By extension, these dynamics have
created a shared threat between the leaders of Rwanda and the Tutsi
militias in eastern DRC. Therefore Tutsi militias in eastern DRC are, by
the nature of the threat they face, natural enemies of the FDLR and
thereby natural allies of the government in Kigali.
Yet
Kigali finds it difficult to officially and actively and openly support
its natural allies in eastern Congo. If you talk to top security and
military strategists of the Rwanda government, they feel wary of Tutsi
militias in DRC.
They
complain that these militias and their leaders are “Congolese.” By
“Congolese,” the RPF leaders are not merely referring to citizenship but
to culture, attitude and behaviour. The typical Rwandan Tutsi is
reserved and will probably have Spartan discipline, qualities shaped by
decades of harsh life in refugee camps. The Congolese Tutsi is
boisterous and lax. Consequently, the Rwandan security personnel accuse
Congolese Tutsis of being undisciplined. The Congolese Tutsis accuse
Rwandan security officials of being control freaks.
These
differences are not merely at the level of behaviour and attitude but
also at the level of operational method. The leaders of Rwanda would
prefer full control over M23; the Congolese Tutsis insist on
independence. Although they share a common ethnicity, the two are as
different culturally as an Athenian was from a Spartan in 5th century BC
Greece. So there is therefore constant tension between them.
Kigali
is acutely aware that if it supported the Tutsi militias yet it lacks
effective control over their operations, it would risk being held
responsible for their actions. Yet Kigali cannot completely abandon them
either.
For
example, if Tutsi militias were defeated, there is a real risk of
genocide against ordinary Tutsis by Hutu extremists and other Congolese
communities hostile to them. Kigali cannot politically afford to sit by
and watch such a thing happen right at its border.
Therefore,
to understand the complexity of the current flare up in fighting in DRC
is to first appreciate the fears and temptations people in Kigali face.
First, the Tutsi militias in Congo, even without Kigali’s active
support, act as a buffer between Rwanda and the FDLR.
Second, they protect local Tutsi populations that face existential threats from the FDLR and other Congolese communities.
Third,
these militias and their warlords ensure order in a region where the
Congolese state in almost absent. Therefore, their defeat would present a
key security challenge to Rwanda. Thus Kigali finds itself in a
position where it cannot support the Tutsi militias in Congo while at
the same time it cannot abandon their cause.
To
resolve this dilemma, Kigali adopted a two-pronged approach: One
short-term and tactical; the other long-term and strategic. In the short
term, Kigali would not support any Tutsi militias in eastern DR Congo
but it would not act against them either.
Control over militia
Kinshasa
and the international community believe that Rwanda has absolute
control over these militias. Both therefore demand that Kigali either
directs them to stop fighting or takes active action against their
activities. Kigali does not have absolute control, but it does have
leverage over them. If it sought to actively undermine their activities,
it can bring them to their knees — but at a price.
Rwanda
knows that any action it takes against Tutsi militias cannot destroy
them completely but only weaken them. In fact, there is a real
possibility that they can form new alliances with other groups and
therefore also become hostile to Kigali. Besides, if these Tutsi
militias were severely weakened, there would be a power vacuum in
eastern DRC. Without an alternative source to supply security to the
area, the region would degenerate into anarchy, a situation Kigali
cannot afford.
These
fears have made Kigali adopt a “turn-a-blind-eye” strategy towards the
Tutsi militias. Thus, whenever individuals inside Rwandan society are
involved in helping their kith and kin across the border, Kigali refuses
to play the role of Congolese policeman.
For
example, assuming Rwandan security services got intelligence that some
individuals inside the country were actively raising funds and meeting
some of the militia leaders. Kigali would turn a blind eye and pretend
it did not hear it. Assuming Rwandan officials heard that one of the
militia leaders was in some village in Rwanda, the government would look
the other way.
It
is in this context that some human rights groups that claim that some
of the rebel leaders enter Rwanda could be telling at least a slice of
the truths. Kigali has taken a tough line on two things: It is not going
to play cop for Kinshasa or the international community.
Kigali’s
view is that Kinshasa has to find a way to work with its citizens to
create a stable political order or the international community should
pull up its socks and provide the security in the area. What Kigali is
not going to do is help the two create a security vacuum in the region.
At
a press conference in Kigali on June 19, President Paul Kagame was
emphatic: these warlords live in DRC which has 17,000 UN troops costing
$1.2 billion a year — 50 per cent of Rwanda’s annual budget. If the
issues of Congo are that simple, why can’t this force arrest these rebel
commanders with all the capacity it has? Why transfer the
responsibility to Rwanda?
Officials
in Kigali are discouraged from dealing with rebel leaders and other
Congolese. For instance, when information emerged that some top generals
in the Rwanda security services had been involved in meetings and
financial transactions with Congolese businessmen, President Kagame
placed them under house arrest.
However,
Kigali is smart enough to understand that this cannot be a long-term
policy to solving the problem. The source of Rwanda’s security
vulnerability is the long standing governance issue in DRC ie the
absence of an effective and functional state. The solution for DRC lies
in reconstructing the state. Ironically Kigali is even more concerned
about security in the eastern DRC than Kinshasa.
For
example, Rwanda is positioning itself as the region’s main high-end
tourism destination. Its prize in this strategy is the mountain gorillas
right at the border with DRC. Nothing threatens this strategic interest
than insecurity in eastern DRC as it scares away tourists — but most
especially rich ones whom it charges top dollar.
Secondly,
Rwanda is making a couple of strategic investments right at the border
with DRC. First, it is developing a methane gas plant in Lake Kivu, just
a stone throw from the border with Congo, to produce 150MW of
electricity.
Kigali
has further signed a multimillion dollar joint venture investment with
New Forest Company, a consortium of Britain’s high net worth individuals
alongside HSBC Bank and the European Investment Bank. The consortium
are going to cut and replant Nyungwe Forest and develop a regional
timber and furniture industry on one hand and on the other, produce
100MW of electricity.
Finally, Kigali is beginning to increase its mining and export of Coltan — located in the same place.
Kigali
says that insecurity in eastern Congo would be a strategic
vulnerability in its pursuit of its Vision 2020. Also that it cannot
attract and sustain serious investments if eastern DRC is controlled by
war lords — however closely tied to Kigali they may be.
It
is the same kind of threat that Somali militants in the south of the
country posed to Kenya’s tourism industry and the country’s Southern
Sudan-Ethiopia Transport Corridor (LAPSSET).
Kenya
resolved this by sending an army into south Somalia, and got an African
Union and UN Security Council vote supporting it. If Rwanda did
anything like that in DRC, it would have its legs cut off at the knees
by the international community.
Rwanda’s
leaders argue that their vital national strategic interests are best
served by a stable and effective state in DRC. Kigali also knows that it
cannot manage Congo — a country that is 27 times larger.
As
a foreign policy strategy, Rwanda has long abandoned its earlier faith
in influencing regime change in neighbouring states. By 2004, Rwanda had
also abandoned ambitions to fight proxy wars, realising that they may
achieve short term gains at the price of creating long strategic
vulnerabilities.
This
lesson was driven home by Kigali’s fall out with former Congolese
president and erstwhile ally, Laurent Kabila; coupled with its fallout
with Uganda in Congo. The lesson from these two experiences, every
strategist in Kigali will tell you, was that helping someone capture
power in another country does not automatically guarantee a durable
alliance between you and them.
RPF
had been supported by Uganda under President Yoweri Museveni. But this
did not sustain the alliance as the two countries degenerated into
hostilities and finally fought in Congo. Equally, Rwanda had helped
Kabila and installed him president in Kinshasa. They turned enemies and
fought pitched battles.
Kigali
realised that it has fought more wars against its former allies than
those it was allied to. The lesson sunk: you can make a king, but you
cannot control them once you have made them. Its own strained relations
with Congolese Tutsi works always as a reminder that it should not rely
on them entirely. The view is that government should always seek to deal
with the leaders neighbours produce rather than seek to influence who
emerges as leader.
Therefore,
Kigali decided that it needed to engage Kinshasa and leverage whatever
connections it had with the Tutsi militias to arrive at a solution for
eastern Congo. It offered to help bring the militias to agree with
Kinshasa on a peace deal. Kinshasa agreed to integrate the militias into
its army but leave them in control of their troops to protect their
communities. The two sides also agreed that Rwanda would send its
special forces into eastern Congo to fight the FDLR. Even today, Rwanda
has its special forces inside eastern DRC who have been conducting joint
operations with the Congolese army.
This
joint effort offers the best possible solution to the DRC crisis and
should be the agreement that the international community push Kagame and
Kabila to uphold rather than condemn one side and push Kigali over the
edge into letting Nkunda off the leash.
Andrew M. Mwenda is the managing editor of news magazine The Independent, of Uganda.
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