Friday, 7 September 2012

ICGLR Kampala-II Summit kicks off today: Another Carnival of Trolls

(PHOTO: South Sudanese Prez Salva Kiir deplaning from a chartered

flight of Ethiopian Airlines at Entebbe Airport, Friday, September 7,

2012)



***



South Sudanese Prez Salva Kiir was the first among the 6 Heads of

State to touch down in Uganda this Friday for what is billed as the

International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) Kampala

Summit-II.



Kampla-II kicks off today at Kampala Speke Resort Munyonyo.



The other heads of state expected to attend the Summit are: Pierre

Nkurunziza (Burundi), François Bozizé (Central African Republic),

Joseph Kabila (DRC), Mwai Kibaki (Kenya), and Paul Kagame (Rwanda).



The agenda of the Summit will deal with the "terms of reference" of

the composition of the so-called "neutral force," based on the report

by the designated ICGLR defense ministers.



The "neutral force" is supposed to be deployed along the DRC border

with Burundi, Rwanda and Uganda.



At first, people were led to believe that this "neutral force" would

be a counterinsurgency drive aimed at quelling Rwandan-backed

"negative forces" as well as the FDLR plaguing war-torn northeastern

DRC.



This even seemed to still be the understanding of the "Troika" (Organ

on Democracy, Defence and Security) of the Southern African

Development Community (SADC), which met Tuesday in Dar es Salaam--with

President Joseph Kabila called in to brief it.



At the close of that meeting, the chair of the Troika, Tanzanian Prez

Jakaya Kikwete, said:



"SADC would gladly participate to provide military and logistic

support in DRC if the ICGLR decides so."



Adding:



"SADC is totally satisfied with efforts made by ICGLR and thus we

think there is no need for a parallel initiative to tackle the

conflict."



President Kikwete has most definitely misplaced his trust in the

ICGLR, some of whose members are trolls attending the meeting for the

carnival and the show this provides them.



For one, the "neutral force" seems to now being conceived by some of

those ICGLR trolls as a mere border patrol contingent.



Secondly, it's for instance unlikely that Rwanda and Uganda would

agree on SADC forces being deployed along their borders.



Thirdly, Ugandan Defense Minister Chrispus Kiyonga is suggesting

nothing less than the revisitation of the infamous 2009 agreement

whose alleged breach by the DRC government M23 are invoking as a

pretext for their insurgency.



Said Kiyonga:



"These [options for peace in northeastern DRC] include looking at the

agreement of the 23rd March 2009 because the failure to

implement the recommendations of the [AU] Special Envoys has actually

created the formation of M23."



The problem with this line of reasoning is that it's a non-starter for

both the DRC and Belgium, which is now willing to take charge of the

Security Sector Reform (SSR) of the Congo.



In his recent "Shuttle Diplomacy" in the region, Belgian Deputy

Premier and Foreign Minister Didier Reynders was repeating ad nauseum

his "Garbage in Garbage Out" principle on SSR:



"If you in integrate undisciplined elements into the army, you

integrate undiscipline by the same token."



Besides, here in Kinshasa, UDPS MP Rémy Masamba ma Kiese is

spearheading a campaign for opening impeachment proceedings against

Kabila when Parliament convenes this month.



MP Masamba and other opposition leaders contend that as the Parliament

and the Congolese people weren't privvy to the content of the secret

2009 agreement with CNDP qua M23, Kabila might have engaged in

treasonable acts.



They further charge that by not declaring war against Rwanda, Kabila

could also be charged with "high treason"--an impeachable offense.



Though MP Masamba's impeachment motion is unlikely to see the light of

day in Parliament, there's no way Kabila would further erode his

domestic political capital by accomodating M23.



Kampala-II is also torpedoed by Rwanda, who hasn't even come close to

acknwoledging its backing of M23.



Rwanda is still blaming the UN Group of Experts of fabricating

evidence implicating Kigali.



What's more, both Rwanda and the DRC are now wading waist-deep in the

dung of mean negative rhetoric.



DRC Media Minister is denying there were 357 Rwandan special operators

allowed by the Congolese government in the Rutshuru area.



Mende charges that Rwanda took the opportunity of the pull-out of the

less than 100 troops it had in that area to "exfiltrate" some of its

troops backing M23.



He's also calling on Rwanda to withdraw the 5,000+ troops it has in

Bunagana and other areas occupied by M23.



The "exfiltration" of Rwandan troops from eastern DRC recently

prompted the UK to "unfreeze" parts of its aid to Rwanda.



And, bolstered by this "unfreezing" of UK aid, Rwandan Foreign

Minister Louise Mushikiwabo has now gone on auto-pilot mode as an

insult-producing factory.



She told France24 TV news channel this week:



"DRC has gotten into the mood of playing the victim every time they

are confronted with a situation.



"Nothing is ever their responsibility

whenever there is trouble, they always get someone to blame, if it's

not Rwanda, it's Congo-

Brazzaville, if not them, it's the Ugandans or Angolans."



With this kind of hysterical outbursts issuing from Rwanda, Kampala-II

is doomed from the get go.



And maybe the way out for the DRC would be, as MP Rémy Masamba is

shouting out loud, a formal declaration of an all-out war against

Rwanda.



With mortar rounds being lobbed at Gisenyi from Bukavu, at least the

citizens of both countries would be equally sharing the horrors of war

first hand.





***

Sources: newswires; dailynews.co.tz; newvision.co.ug; newtimes.co.rw;

RTNC TV; & Kinshasa media.



***

PHOTO CREDITS: Enock

Kakande/newvision.co.ug

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