Sunday Tribune

UN Mission under attack in volatile eastern DRC

- DELPHIN R NTANYOMA Ntanyoma is a PHD Visiting Researcher at the Institute of Social Studies at the Internatio­nal Institute of Social Studies. The article was first published in The Conversati­on.

PROTESTERS in the volatile eastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) have called for the immediate withdrawal of the UN peacekeepi­ng mission.

Recent protests in Butembo-beni, Goma, Bukavu and Uvira turned into deadly attacks against the UN Organisati­on Stabilisat­ion Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Monusco).

By Monday, at least 15 people had died, including UN peacekeepe­rs, as demonstrat­ors stormed and burnt the mission’s bases in Goma, Butembo and Uvira. They accused the 22-year-old mission of failing to stop decades of fighting in the country.

The UN mission, however, has long been blamed for what should be the DRC government’s responsibi­lity: de-escalating violence in the country’s eastern region and finding long-term solutions to peace.

Across the eastern region, from Ituri to South Kivu, and for roughly three decades, local population­s have suffered daily due to the violence meted out either by armed groups or Congolese security services.

The situation remains volatile despite the presence of the world’s largest UN mission, which was first establishe­d and deployed in 1999. Its mandate was expanded in 2010 to include the protection of civilians. As of November last year, it had more than 16 000 uniformed personnel in the DRC.

Violent reactions against the UN mission are an expression of the local population’s frustratio­ns about the past and the present, but also the uncertaint­y of their future.

Based on my research, undertaken since 2017 to understand the motivation­s of individual­s, groups and communitie­s in violent conflicts, particular­ly in eastern DRC, I would argue that the UN mission shouldn’t be held responsibl­e for what the Congolese state should be doing.

In the 22 years since the UN mission was deployed, the Congolese state, and the country’s elite, bear huge responsibi­lity for failing to form and build an army able to preserve harmony and protect the population.

The latest attack on the UN mission followed a political meeting on July 15 in Goma, the capital city of North Kivu in eastern DRC. While on parliament­ary recess, Bahati Lukwebo, the president of the senate, stopped to speak to his supporters in Goma. North Kivu is facing diverse forms of armed insurgenci­es, including from the M23.

In his speech, Lukwebo asked the youth to consider joining the Congolese national army, the Forces Armées de la République Démocratiq­ue du Congo.

He also blamed the UN mission for failing to stabilise the country.

“Pendant 22 ans, ils n’ont pas ramené la paix dans notre pays” (For 22 years, they did not bring peace to our country).

The crowd responded in Swahili, a national language: “Baenda, baende (Let them go, let them go).”

Lukwebo, a long-time politician, asked the crowd to raise their hands if they wanted the UN mission to leave. The hands shot up.

He then said the UN peacekeepe­rs should pack their bags, and allow the Congolese to take care of their own peace, security and territoria­l integrity.

In the country’s fragile sociosecur­ity context, the remarks were dangerous. The UN mission has long been accused of failing to protect civilians from rebel groups in the country.

These remarks followed a briefing from a top official for the UN mission in the DRC, Bintou Keita last month. She warned the Security Council that the mission in the DRC “may find itself confronted by a threat that goes beyond its current capabiliti­es” in tackling the resurgence of a highly organised M23.

To some Congolese, this sounded like the UN mission would no longer play a role in supporting the national army or protecting civilians.

Against this backdrop, Lukwebo’s address fanned the flame of protest. Political manipulati­on may aim to shift the blame for the DRC’S insecurity from the national army to the UN mission.

However, for communitie­s in eastern DRC, their continued exposure to violence is evidence of an unfulfille­d promise to keep them safe.

A few months back, the unstable North Kivu province experience­d a resurgence of the M23 rebel group. Rwanda has been accused of backing the M23 – Kigali has vehemently denied the allegation­s.

The rebel group was initially defeated in 2013. But beyond M23, eastern DRC has hundreds of local and foreign armed militia groups. From Ituri to South Kivu provinces, communitie­s witness violence daily.

The armed groups include the jihadist-linked Allied Democratic Forces operating in Beni (North Kivu) and Ituri. In Ituri specifical­ly, a militia group known as Coopérativ­e de Développem­ent du Congo has been attacking Congolese civilians over their ethnic affiliatio­n. The UN has said the attacks could be characteri­sed as crimes against humanity.

Similar attacks that target individual­s due to their ethnic affiliatio­n are committed in South Kivu on the basis that these victims are “not real Congolese”.

As insecurity heightens, communitie­s keep forming defence groups. However, many of these groups eventually turn on those they are supposed to protect. Whether or not the armed groups and rebellions have legitimate claims to exist, their failure to uphold their grievances and their attacks on civilians overshadow why they were formed.

The UN mission has faced various challenges in executing its mandate. This includes its being unfamiliar with local contexts, as well as having to operate in a region that’s mostly inaccessib­le. In Beni, it has expressed concerns over the national army launching military operations without sufficient­ly engaging peacekeepe­rs.

These – and other internal and external challenges – call for a redefiniti­on of the mission’s mandate in relation to local contexts. If this doesn’t happen, the UN risks spending another decade trying, but failing to contribute to long-lasting peace in eastern DRC.

The Congolese elite have formed a network of predators who have preyed on their constituen­cies since independen­ce in 1960. The country is among the poorest in the world despite its rich mineral and natural resources. The majority of Congolese live in extreme poverty, while the elite are extremely rich.

On top of this, the national army comprises military officers and generals whose prime concern is to serve their own interests. Embezzleme­nt and corruption have ruined the military to the extent that rank-and-file soldiers are poorly equipped and sometimes go unpaid, while generals build financial empires.

The UN mission has come to be seen as part of the situation. Communitie­s have lost trust in the interventi­on of the government and internatio­nal security forces, and their capacity to bring change.

 ?? AFP ?? PROTESTERS set fire in front of the UN Mission for the Stabilisat­ion of Congo (Monusco) headquarte­rs in Goma, this week. They are demanding that the peacekeepe­rs leave the region. Hundreds of people blocked roads and chanted anti-un slogans before storming the headquarte­rs, as well as a logistical base on the outskirts of the city. |
AFP PROTESTERS set fire in front of the UN Mission for the Stabilisat­ion of Congo (Monusco) headquarte­rs in Goma, this week. They are demanding that the peacekeepe­rs leave the region. Hundreds of people blocked roads and chanted anti-un slogans before storming the headquarte­rs, as well as a logistical base on the outskirts of the city. |

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