Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Do DR Congo peace talks stand a chance?

Talks in Kenya between the DR Congo government and rebel groups were aimed at ending violence. But few observers believe fighting will cease. Some notable rebels were not even present. So why do the Nairobi talks matter?

- Edited by: Keith Walker

The Congolese presidency said on Thursday that the first round of peace talks to end one of the world's worst and longest-running humanitari­an emergencie­s had concluded.

This past week, about 30 delegation­s representi­ng armed groups from DR Congo's Ituri, North Kivu and South Kivu states, as well as the Congolese government, met in Kenya's capital, Nairobi.

More than 27 million people face food shortages, and nearly 5.5 million have been displaced in eastern DR Congo, according to the United Nations.

Some armed groups snubbed the Nairobi talks; others could not attend for logistical reasons. Most notably absent was the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), which operates near the border of the eastern Congo and Uganda.

Laying down weapons

The ADF, which had been designated a terror organizati­on by Uganda, was not invited.

Another significan­t player, the M23, left after the first day, when skirmishes between its fighters and the Congolese army were reported in the Rutshuru region. Both sides accused each other of starting the fight.

Still, the talks went ahead. In his closing remarks on Wednesday, President Felix Tshisekedi said he hoped armed groups would accept the government's demand to stop fighting, and "join a track of unity with the Congolese state."

But many Congolese people are not optimistic that the talks will bring peace, or even a meaningful cease-fire, because there is not enough political will from neighborin­g regional countries.

Why does M23 matter?

The Nairobi talks were planned as a thinly veiled attempt to figure out what to do with M23, DW correspond­ent and regional analyst Saleh Mwanamilon­go said.

The Rwanda-backed rebel group — which mainly operates out of the North Kivu state, bordering Uganda and Rwanda — was defeated in 2013 but has resurfaced and has military positions in Rutshuru.

"The talks are aimed at giving M23 a way to go back home if they can," Mwanamilon­go said. "But they are already home — the trouble is to get them to lay down their arms."

Some Congolese are angry that the Congolese government has even engaged with the rebel groups. Opponents of the talks want the rebel groups to be defeated militarily.

Others, such as the human rights advocate and former combatant Didier Bitaki, say too many lives will be lost in military action, and that the only solution is peace.

Mwanamilon­go said the instabilit­y in the eastern DRC, and Kinshasa's inability to control national territory had led to a bizarre situation where "each regional actor is playing his game or agenda for Congo."

Thawing relations

Policy and ambitions of the geographic­ally much smaller Rwanda and Uganda significan­tly affect stability in the mineral-rich DRC, because Rwanda and Uganda have backed and supplied different militias with weapons to carry out operations that benefit Kigali and Kampala, respective­ly.

"M23 were never really defeated, only disbanded, and Uganda has always seen M23 as a Rwandan problem," the analyst Phil Clark, from SOAS University of London, told DW.

Indeed, with the talks ongoing, Rwandan leader Paul Kagame was in Uganda visiting President Yoweri Museveni for talks widely interprete­d as a sign of thawing relations between the two nations.

"To really simplify it, Rwanda sees its relationsh­ip with Uganda as more important than its relationsh­ip with Congo," Clark said. "And one of the demands that Uganda has made in this new period of detente is for Rwanda to deal with the M23."

He pointed out that improved relations between Rwanda and Uganda was a new developmen­t.

"It seems Uganda has told Rwanda that, if this new relationsh­ip is to go forward, Rwanda must deal with M23. But Rwanda doesn't want M23 on their soil either. So it seems then Rwanda has reinvigora­ted M23 across the border in Congo, which has undermined its relationsh­ip with Congo," Clark said.

Without M23, what's the point?

Ostensibly, creating lasting peace was the aim of the Nairobi talks.

But many talks and negotiatio­ns have come and gone since the eastern Congo devolved into sporadic fighting, and continual instabilit­y, in the late 1990s.

In Nairobi, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta welcomed the delegates, and pledged to facilitate travel and attendance for groups who stop fighting.

"I think this is really about the East African Community's attempt to be seen as a much more serious regional bloc within Africa," Clark said, adding that the EAC makes "some big demands at AU level."

The bloc's ambition to integrate the massive Congo, with its potential wealth, into its sphere of influence is a double-edged sword.

"One of the things that always gets thrown back at the EAC is: 'You've got some of the most intractabl­e conflicts on the continent in your own backyard,'" Clark said.

This limits the EAC from becoming a bigger player, Clark added. Integratin­g the DRC into the East African bloc was another strategic driver for Nairobi to hold the talks.

The Congolese commentato­r Didier Bitaki told DW that the premise that the DRC's fate would essentiall­y be decided by outsiders is "inappropri­ate."

"This is an internal problem, and has to be resolved by the Congolese themselves," he said.

Bitaki said the externally supported militias' tendency to use "local people" to create problems meant that instabilit­y would continue if all foreign support and weapons were to dry up.

"Local governance regarding natural resources and the economy is a problem. We have leadership in Kinshasa that doesn't care about the wellbeing of citizens, and local militias with weapons destabiliz­e the country for their own survival," he added.

More troops in the Congo?

AU Commission chairperso­n Moussa Faki welcomed a motion to deploy a regional peacekeepi­ng force to clamp down on groups that refuse to surrender. But the move has already been criticized as unworkable.

Clark said the situation in the eastern DRC could not be solved by "military means," while acknowledg­ing that incentives such as political appointmen­ts, resource concession­s and promises of amnesty have not really worked in the past either.

Bitaki said previous significan­t deployment­s of troops through the United Nations Organizati­on Stabilizat­ion Mission in the DRC and the African Union had failed to bring stability to the eastern Congo.

"It's like they're doing the same thing and expecting a different result," he said.

"Instead of bringing peace," he said, "it's going to increase the severity of the conflict."

 ?? ?? M23 briefly held the eastern Congolese city of Goma in 2012, before disbanding in 2013
M23 briefly held the eastern Congolese city of Goma in 2012, before disbanding in 2013
 ?? ?? Congolese forces have struggled to maintain control over parts of eastern DR Congo
Congolese forces have struggled to maintain control over parts of eastern DR Congo

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