Thursday, 12 July 2012

Thierry Michel, shuttle diplomacy, M23's demands, FDLR on the loose, and MONUSCO gunships & FARDC Hind copters strafe M23 positions

1) Thierry Michel: Access Denied



At a time when the DRC needs all the friends it could get, it has just

shot itself in the foot, according to Colette Braeckman, by turning

back Belgian documentarian Thierry Michel (photo above) at Kinshasa

N'Djili Airport on Sunday.





Michel claims to be holding a 5-year residence visa in the DRC,

whereas Congolese immigration authorities claim he doesn't have any

visa whatsoever.





Michel, a prolific documentarist, released the award-winning

documentary titled "L'Affaire Chebeya (un crime d'Etat ?)" [The

Chebeya Case (a state crime?], which is very critical of the role of

the Congolese state in the assassination in Kinshasa of the rights

advocate.





(Page Address:blog.lesoir.be/colette-braeckman/2012/07/09/lexpulsion-de-thierry-michel-une-balle-dans-le-pied/)







2) DRC-Rwanda diplomatic row in Addis & M23 growing list of new demands





DRC and Rwanda took their diplomatic row to Addis Ababa Wednesday at

cabinet level meeting within the framework of the International

Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR).





The ICGLR was set up in 2004 as, among other things, "a forum for

resolving armed conflict" by the following 11 members: Angola,

Burundi, Central African Republic (CAR), Republic of Congo, Democratic

Republic of Congo, Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia.





(I don't know whether South Sudan has since joined this platform.)





Observers fear that the DRC, weakened by recent blows it suffered on

the battlefield, would be hoodwinked by making its domestic security

depend on the whims of President Paul Kagame.





The ICGLR recommendations seem to be proving that point: more

anti-FDLR drives and border surveillance by a mutually-agreed third

party.





Is this a joke?





Colette Braeckman sees Kagame taking a page from his own playbook by

"talking and fighting" (or "negotiating for side effects" in Fred

Ikle's terminology).



(Page Address: blog.lesoir.be/colette-braeckman/2012/07/10/cartes-sur-table-a-addis-abeba/)





Braeckman observes that after each so-called "rebellion" in eastern

DRC--a euphemism for Rwandan aggression--the "Congolese army

[was]commanded to grant amnesty to mutineers, to integrate them, and

to appoint them at ranks of command, thus paving the way to subsequent

treasons!"





An army of treasonable embeds indeed.





And Braeckman also points to the the open-ended list of M23

ever-growing demands: more senior ranks, better pay, repatriation of

more than 50,000 Rwandophone refugees from Rwanda--without first

proving their Congolese citizenship!





She forgot to mention what I heard their leader tell a TV reporting

crew: better roads in the area!





Who do these brainsicks think they are fooling!





As for the M23 demand of repatriation of 50,000 refugees, Jason

Stearns, as early as February 2010, noted on his blog Congo Siasa

that: "There is no doubt that thousands of cows have

crossed the border from Rwanda over the past year. Several reports of

[Rwandophone] refugees returning from Rwanda to Masisi indicate that

groups often cross with herds of cattle."





Adding:





"Several factors have played into this. Rwanda has limited the public

grazing of cattle and recently introduced zero-grazing (keeping cattle

indoors) to prevent soil erosion. En bref, there is limited room in

Rwanda for cattle."





In other words, DRC as Rwanda's lebensraum, or better, as its dumpster.





(Page Address: congosiasa.blogspot.com/2010/02/war-of-cows.html?m=1)





3) FDLR on the loose as MONUSCO gunships & FARDC Hind copters strafe

M23 positions





One of the casualties of the current war could be anti-FDLR military operations.





The Rwandan terrorist group is now on the loose.





In his post of Tuesday, Dr Emmanuel de Mérode, Chief Warden of the

Virunga National Park, reported that the FDLR "were attacking and

looting vehicles containing people fleeing the fighting in Rutshuru."





He added:





"In the east, the town of Nyamilima is now under the control of the

FDLR militias. They've taken

advantage of the political unrest to expand their territory, which

puts our patrol post at Sarambwe

at risk."





In his post of today at midday, de Mérode notes:





"This morning there was a helicopter raid on Bukima, our patrol post

on the edge of the gorilla sector. Two UN combat helicopters circled

above as two other Congolese army Hind attack

helicopters fired missiles. It's the first time we've seen UN and

Congolese military on joint

operations."





Later on, an AFP report backed up de Mérode's observations and

reported that there were actually 3 MONUSCO and 2 FARDC copters that

strafed the localities of Nkokwe and Bukima.

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