Congo rebel leader to meet presidents in Uganda

From: Judy Miriga

Folks,

Congo should not fall in the hands of Museveni. Kagame was serving Museveni’s interest. Congo should go back to the hands of Congolese people. Kabila stole elections and he has been working with Kagame and Museveni. Museveni and Kagame have Special Interest in Congo and this must not be allowed.

Mr. Ntaganda Bosco “Exterminator” Deputized Kagame to invade Rwanda aided by Museveni. Bosco “Exterminator” a Rwandese overthrew Gen Nkunda and take over the leadership of the CNDP militia.

Kabila failed to allow for fair elections, but Congo must not go to the hands of the Rwandese and Ugandan authorities. It must go back to the Congolese people themselves. Occupation must be discouraged.

Kabila, Kagame and Museveni must be charged for all these violation, crime and abuse of Human Rights at the ICC Hague.

Why should the Extaminator Bosco a Rwandese be aided by Kagame and Museveni to overtake Congo; and why did Kabila steal the election? Two wrongs do not make a right at the end of the day, Kabila against Kagame and Museveni fail to agree on their Special Interest deals, things fall apart and Kagame with Museveni use Exterminator Bosco to invade Congo, killing people, children, women and consequently driving the community away from their homes…..

Is this fair…..Handing Congo to Museveni..? Kabila, Museveni and Kagama must all go to ICC Hague…….and Museveni must stop being a bully in the Region………….

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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Congo rebel leader to meet presidents in Uganda
By EDMUND KAGIRE and MELANIE GOUBY | Associated Press –

GOMA, Congo (AP) — The leader of a rebel group seeking to overthrow the Congolese government headed to neighboring Uganda on Thursday following a meeting between the Rwandan and Congolese presidents.

However, rebel spokesman Lt. Col. Vianney Kazarama vowed that the fighters would press forward toward seizing the strategic eastern town of Bukavu, which would mark the biggest gain in rebel territory in nearly a decade if it were to fall.

The presidents from Congo, Rwanda and Uganda who met in the Ugandan capital of Kampala already have called on the fighters to give up the territory they now control. Congolese President Joseph Kabila later said he was willing to talk with rebel representatives.

“We are not stopping at all; the determination is the same. Whatever happens in Kampala does not affect us,” Kazarama told The Associated Press, confirming that rebel leader Col. Sultani Makenga was traveling to Uganda.

The fighters from the group known as M23 are believed to be backed by neighboring Rwanda already have seized the provincial capital of Goma this week and later took the nearby town of Sake on Wednesday.

The violence has forced more than 100,000 people to flee, more than half of whom are children, according to the U.N. children’s agency.

While the rebels have vowed to overthrow President Joseph Kabila’s government, they remain some 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) from the capital of Kinshasa in a country of dense jungle with few paved roads.

Meanwhile, hundreds of Congolese soldiers who had retreated from Goma days earlier were holed up in Minova, a lakeside city on the road to Bukavu.

“We are waiting for orders, but they haven’t come yet. We’re hungry and have spent five days sleeping in the bush under the rain,” said a Congolese army major who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

The rebels are believed to be backed by Rwanda, and to a smaller extent by Uganda, which are accused of equipping them with sophisticated arms, including night vision goggles and 120 mm mortars.

A report released Wednesday by the U.N. Group of Experts said both Rwanda and Uganda have “cooperated to support the creation and expansion of the political branch of M23 and have consistently advocated on behalf of the rebels.”

The report’s release, just one day after the violent takeover of Goma, is sure to increase pressure on the international community to confront the two eastern African countries over their role in neighboring Congo’s conflict.

Both Rwanda and Uganda have repeatedly denied supporting the M23 movement and have faced little international criticism over the allegations.

The presidents of Rwanda and Uganda recently met with their Congolese counterpart in the Ugandan capital, where they jointly resolved to put pressure on the M23 rebels to give up territory they have captured, according to a statement released at the end of the emergency talks.

The three presidents said in a joint statement released at the end of their talks in Kampala that they resolved to force M23 rebels to give up Goma and make a retreat.

“Even if there are legitimate grievances by the mutineering group known as M23, (the presidents) cannot accept the expansion of this war or entertain the idea of overthrowing the legitimate government of (Congo) or undermining its authority,” the presidents’ statement said.

Goma was last threatened by rebels in 2008 when fighters from the now-defunct National Congress for the Defense of the People, or CNDP, stopped just short of the city.

Their backs to the wall, the Congolese government agreed to enter into talks with the CNDP and a year later, on March 23, 2009, a peace deal was negotiated calling for the CNDP to put down their arms in return for being integrated into the national army.

The peace deal fell apart this April, when up to 700 soldiers, most of them ex-CNDP members, defected from the army, claiming that the Congolese government had failed to uphold their end of the deal. Like in 2008, they again advanced toward Goma. This time, the city fell and the disastrous consequences for the population were already on display.

21 November 2012 Last updated at 00:32 ET

DR Congo Seeks Democracy

The UN’s failure to confront insurgents who seized a strategic city in the Democratic Republic of Congo on Tuesday has raised questions about its largest and costliest peacekeeping mission.

The blue helmets gave up the battle for Goma in the eastern part of the country without firing a shot, standing aside as M23 rebels – widely believed to be backed by Rwanda – overran the frontier city of up to one million people.

For the French Foreign Minister, Laurent Fabius, it was “absurd” that the UN troops had allowed the rebels to parade past them. He urged that the mandate of the more than 17,000-strong force be reviewed.

The DR Congo peacekeepers – known by their acronym Monusco – are authorised to use force to protect civilians and support Congolese army operations against rebel groups and militias competing for control of mineral wealth in the lawless east of the country.

They have been criticised before for failing to respond adequately to atrocities against civilians committed by the rebels, notably a mass rape near one of their bases in 2010.

In their defence the UN emphasises that despite the relatively large size of the mission, troops are spread thinly over a vast and difficult terrain – 6,700 are deployed in North Kivu province where Goma is located, 1,500 in the city itself.

Continue reading the main story
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-17994753#story_continues_3

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