Daily Tribune (Philippines)

UN peacekeepe­rs pull out from DR Congo

Kinshasa considers the UN force ineffectiv­e in protecting civilians from armed groups

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KAMANYOLA, Democratic Republic of Congo (AfP) — The United Nations was to kick off Wednesday the withdrawal of MONUSCO peacekeepi­ng forces from the Democratic Republic of Congo by handing over a first UN base to national police.

The DRC demanded the withdrawal despite UN concerns about rampant violence in the east of the country.

Kinshasa considers the UN force to be ineffectiv­e in protecting civilians from the armed groups and militias that have plagued the east of the vast country for three decades.

The UN Security Council voted in December to accede to Kinshasa’s demand for a gradual pullout by the MONUSCO mission, which arrived in 1999.

The UN force currently fields around 13,500 soldiers and 2,000 police across the three eastern provinces of Ituri, South Kivu and North Kivu.

The “disengagem­ent plan” is due to take place in three phases with completion depending on regular assessment­s.

The first base to be handed over is at Kamanyola, on the border with Burundi.

Phase one is to see the departure of military peacekeepe­rs from South Kivu by the end of April and civilian staff by 30 June.

Before May, the UN force is to leave its 14 bases in the province and hand them over to DRC security forces.

In Kamanyola, with a population of about 100,000, opinions appeared divided on the eve of the first step in the pullout.

Ombeni Ntaboba, head of a local youth council, said he was not too concerned.

Every evening, he said, “we see them out in their armored vehicles around the Ruzizi plain,” where armed groups operate along the border.

 ?? PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? VOLUNTEER performs life-saving gestures during a training for users of the French applicatio­n ‘Staying Alive’ which geolocates amateur rescuers nearby cardiac arrest in Nerac. ‘Staying Alive,’ a mobile app is made available to emergency services in 80 French department­s and deployed in particular in Lot-et-Garonne, a pioneer in its use since 2017.
PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VOLUNTEER performs life-saving gestures during a training for users of the French applicatio­n ‘Staying Alive’ which geolocates amateur rescuers nearby cardiac arrest in Nerac. ‘Staying Alive,’ a mobile app is made available to emergency services in 80 French department­s and deployed in particular in Lot-et-Garonne, a pioneer in its use since 2017.

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