Saturday, 7 July 2012

Rutshuru falls: "Towns and army forces are falling like chess pieces" & Call for drones over DRC-Rwanda border

In a report filed today from Kampala, Uganda, reporter Nicholas

Bariyo, writing for The Wall Street Journal, reports that the town of

Rutshuru has also fallen to M23 insurgents, "forcing aid officials and

the U.N. to evacuate staff. Residents fled the town early Friday and

by late afternoon troops also started retreating, according to

witnesses."





The report quotes Sasha Lezhnev (photo above), a senior policy analyst

at the Washington, DC-based Enough Project as saying:





"Eastern Congo's towns and army forces are falling like chess pieces

to the Rwandan-backed M23 rebels, yet the international community is

lingering in wait-and-see mode.





"The fall of the major trading towns of Rutshuru and Bunagana give the

M23 strategic bases in its new war, allowing it to control a

lucrative smuggling route to sell conflict minerals and illegally tax

goods."





The report also quotes a Congolese government spokesman as angrily remarking:





"How long will Rwanda continue to defy with impunity, and repeatedly,

the international community.





"Evidence of Rwanda's aggression is drawn in black and white."





(Page Address: http://mobile2.wsj.com/device/article.php?CALL_URL=http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304141204577512130715884866.html?mod=googlenews_wsj)





In other words, the second Africa's World War would be, once again,

about a military enterprise of highway robberies.





On her part, Belgian journalist Colette Braeckman, in a second post

since the fall of Bunagana and published yesterday, urged the Belgian

government to set up drone surveillances of the Congo-Rwanda border:





"Our military have the means to do this: they have drones, which

monitored Kinshasa during the 2006 elections and have been unused

since. Why not put them at the disposal of MONUSCO, so as to remediate

the chronic blindness of the blue helmets?





"An aerial surveillance would bring to light the veritable springs of

the war: the flows of minerals, the mafia-like collaborations on both

sides of the border, troops movements. This would also defuse Rwanda's

fears by making more difficult infiltrations by 'génocidaires.'





"The oppositions that would probably trigger such an initiative would

already be revealing: they would demonstrate that, in this region,

truth could turn out to be still more cruel than weapons..."





(Page Address: http://blog.lesoir.be/colette-braeckman/2012/07/06/aider-a-surveiller-la-frontiere-rwanda-congo/)





Well, dream on, Braeckman! There's no way Rwanda would allow such

strictures imposed on the all-out entreprenial war of plunder it has

decided to wage against the DRC.





And, by the way, four years ago, Congolese music star Papa Wemba came

up with a similar idea. His idea was more drastic: building a wall on

DRC-Rwanda border! "Why not?," he told a TV host, "the Israelis have

built walls to avoid trouble!"





Meanwhile, in Kinshasa, President Joseph Kabila convened the country's

Security High Council with military and police top brass.

Significantly, Gen Gabriel "Tango-Four" Amisi Kumba, commander of

FARDC Land Forces, wasn't in attendance. But Police boss, Gen Charles

Bisengimana, a Rwandophone, was among the participants--which gives

the lie to the M23 claims they are fighting for the interests of an

ethnic minority.





The communiqué issued at the close of the security meeting did not,

however, specifically address the fall of Bunagana or issue a

declaration of war against Rwanda. A disappointment for Kinois

spoiling for a fight with Rwandans!





This morning on his show on state-owned TV channel RTNC, Lushima

Ndjate was denying that Bunagana had fallen, attacking instead RFI and

Radio Okapi (though the latter was unnamed) for spreading "false

news"! Which shows that propagandists live in a tight bubble.





Yesterday night, in a TV interview, soukouss star Koffi Olomide

bristled at the suggestion that he should feature in one of his

concerts songs by Christian musician Frère Patrice, who also happens

to be the older brother of soukouss star Werrason.





Koffi exclaimed in frustration (my translation from Lingala):





"Good grief, folks! In the name of my mother who gave birth to me in

Kisangani! Do you think that all activities revolve around

Hallelujahs! Even your cameraman as he's taping me would be going

around humming, 'Hallelujah'? Tell you what: if prayer was a panacea,

we'd be seeing Rwandan military officers falling on the battlefield in

eastern Congo, screaming, 'Congolese Prayer has just stopped my

heart!'"





Good point, and a bold move, in country slowly turning into an

evangelical theocrary!





***



PHOTO CREDITS: Woodrow Wilson Center

Via: www.enoughproject.org

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