The Citizen (Gauteng)

HOME AT LAST SA peacekeepe­rs face torture probe

SERVING IN THE DRC: LOCALS FILE POLICE REPORTS

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SA contingent is part of UN force with mandate to neutralise, disarm guerrillas.

South Africa’s military has opened an investigat­ion into reports that members of its 1 000-strong UN-mandated peacekeepi­ng contingent in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo assaulted and tortured locals.

A military statement said “corrective actions” would ensue if the reports, which it understood had come from Congolese citizens, were found to be true. The inquiry would be conducted with the United Nations’ Monusco mission in DRC, the statement added. It gave no details of the allegation­s and Monusco did not elaborate. “We are aware of the case and we have the police record,” Monusco spokespers­on Florence Marshall said.

Under bilateral agreements with host countries, UN soldiers found to have committed crimes while on peacekeepi­ng missions are judged and punished in their home jurisdicti­ons.

Congolese government spokespers­on Lambert Mende said he was not aware of the alleged abuses, but added that it was normal for the investigat­ion to be carried out by South African, rather than Congolese, authoritie­s.

Establishe­d in 2000, Monusco is the United Nations’ largest peacekeepi­ng mission and has come under increasing political and military pressure as the United States has threatened to cut funding just as militia activity in Congo’s mineral-rich eastern hinterland­s has stepped up.

Much of the increase in insecurity is linked to political tensions surroundin­g President Joseph Kabila’s refusal to step down when his mandate expired at the end of 2016.

An election to replace Kabila, who has ruled DRC since his father’s assassinat­ion in 2001, has been repeatedly delayed and is now scheduled for December 2018.

Suspected Ugandan rebels killed at least 15 Tanzanian UN peacekeepe­rs and wounded 53 others in a raid on a base in December.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned it as the worst attack on the organisati­on in recent history.

The South African contingent, based in Goma on the Rwandan border, is part of Monusco’s Force Interventi­on Brigade, which has a special, beefed-up mandate to “neutralise and disarm” guerrilla groups. – Reuters

 ?? Picture: Nigel Sibanda ?? Patrick Mathumzi, who is visually impaired, after receiving the title deed for a Soweto house from the housing department.
Picture: Nigel Sibanda Patrick Mathumzi, who is visually impaired, after receiving the title deed for a Soweto house from the housing department.

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