Monday, 19 November 2012

Losing the Plot

(PHOTO 1: FARDC troops retreating from the frontline)



(PHOTO 2: 60,000 IDPs fled this camp north of Goma Saturday ahead of

advancing M23 insurgents)



***



Contacted by phone early this morning, one of the passengers of the

Kinshasa-bound CAA flight grounded at Goma airport yesterday morning

told me that the North-Kivu manager of the airline told him they could

leave the city tomorrow Tuesday.



Asked about the security situation in Goma, he told me there was an

eerie calm in the city as both warring sides are awaiting the "start

of negotiations" to end the armed confrontations!



(LuAnne of the Virunga National Park published today a post on the

Park's blog that also gave about the same bizarre atmosphere in the

North Kivu provincial capital:



"Last night as the sun went down, M23

rebels faced an army of Congolese tanks

just a few hundred meters away and very

close to Virunga's alternative energy

center on the northern edge of Goma.")



When I told the strandred CAA passenger that the government's position

was that there are to be no negotiations with the insurgents, he said:



"The government has run out of options. They've lost the plot!"



He added that a government negotiating team is due in Goma today or tomorrow!



While I don't buy this wild rumor--for one, M23's demands are

outrageous (including a withdrawal of FARDC from Goma); and secondly,

just yesterday ex-presidential candidate Vital Kamerhe was urging the

government to negotiate--the idea of the government "losing the plot"

was pretty much on my mind as I watched DRC Media Minister Lambert

Mende read the "statement of the government" Saturday, November 17.



Mende's statement says in part:



"This Saturday, 17 November 2012, in the early morning, after a long

artillery preparation fired from the Rwandan territory, some 4,000 men

in motorized columns and on foot have once again converged on Kibumba

[from where they were previously repelled] by skirting around, through

Rwandan territory, the FARDC troops deployed along the Rugari-Rutshuru

road."



Mende also said that in the previous combat, the FARDC had uncoveted

clear evidence of direct participation by the Rwanda Defense Forces

(RDF).



Mende claimed that one RDF lieutenant-colonel named Maombi was among

the enemies felled by the FARDC while another RDF elment, namely

Sergeant Claude Rugamba was "captured."



Which seems to beg the following question: given this latest evidence

of Rwandan direct military involvement, and given the reluctance of

some UN Security Council to namely call Kagame to account, why the

heck doesn't the DRC also attack Rwanda?



In the meantime, as the plot comtinues to slip from government

control, it's the Congolese civilian population that has been bearing

the brunt of the fighting.



According to LuAnne's post mentioned above:



"A camp of 60,000 displaced people north

of Goma completely vacated as M23

advanced on the city, taking the plastic

tarps and what they could carry. Reports

say thousands of new refugees have fled

the fighting."



Launching attacks on Rwanda, in my view, would be a way of lessening

the misery of Congolese IDPs as those attacks could make Rwanda think

twice before thinning out its territorial defenses by sending troops

on its Kivu pillaging venture.







***



PHOTO CREDITS: 1) www.radiookapi.net; & 2) www.gorillacd.org.

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