Wednesday, 27 February 2013

Radio-Trottoir: On Dialogue & on Dissembler-in-chief Paul Kagame

(PHOTO: Prez Paul Kagame in Addis Ababa, Sunday, February 24, 2013)



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Growing anger is palpable in the streets and among radical

oppositionists in Kinshasa following the signing in Addis Ababa,

Ethiopia, on Sunday, February 24, of the so-called "Peace, Security

and Cooperation Framework for the DRC and the Region."



The mood was already deleterious when Speaker Aubin Minaku started

holding talks with various political players and civil society

stakeholders in preparation of the consultations billed as the

"national dialogue against balkanization" called two months ago by

President Joseph Kabila.



Some in the opposition misconstrued this dialogue as yet another

platform where new modalities of power-sharing between the ruling

majority and the opposition would be defined.



This group insisted that Kabila couldn't possibly chair or facilitate

such a dialogue as he was one among other stakeholders who were his

peers. They were advocating instead that the venue of the dialogue be

moved to the right bank of the Congo River, to Brazzaville, with

Congo-Brazzaville President Denis Sassou Nguesso as facilitator.



A non-starter for stalwarts in Kabila camp, who are also frowning on

the new-found friendship between Sassou Nguesso and President Paul

Kagame.



UDPS leader and self-proclaimed president is right now abroad, in

South Africa, for what is rumored to be health reasons. But through

spokespersons, UDPS has set impossible prerequisites for its

participation, including the acknowledgement by Kabila that he didn't

win the November 2011 presidential election.



Then came the signing in Addis of the Framework, which many feel here

that it has short-changed the Congolese.



"Why doesn't the Framework single out Rwanda and Uganda namely as the

aggressors of the DRC?" is a mantra one hears in the streets or in

particularly heated exchanges in political TV shows.



Then there is the "issue," according to some, or the "insult,"

according to others, of the statement, strewn with falsehoods and

outright lies, made by Kagame prior to his signing the Framework.



Kinois are at a loss to understand why Kabila didn't just walk out of

the room when Kagame--moniker "Dissembler-in-Chief"-- proffered these

two shocking lies:



1) "We are all here to pursue one objective: to see security,

stability and peace emerge in DRC and our region."



If this has been Kagame's objective all along, why has he created M23

to begin with? Why has he sent Rwandan troops in reinforcement to M23

back in November 2012 to seize the city of Goma?



This amounts to adding insult to injury, as it were.



2) "[T]he framework recognizes that a holistic approach that addresses

the multi-faceted root causes is the only way to end instability."



This remark is interpreted as the de facto concretization of the

much-dreaded "balkanization" of the DRC.



Are the M23 part of this "holistic approach" to end instability in

North Kivu Province? Though the government insists that M23 is a

"negative force" bound to be dismantled one way or the other, why are

Kampala talks with M23 still ongoing?



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PHOTO: Paul Kagame Flickr Photo Stream.

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