Remarks made by President Jakaya Kikwete on
the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) rebels have
been described as “aberrant” and “shocking”.
The Tanzanian
President suggested - during an AU summit on Sunday in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia - that Kigali should negotiate with the Congo-based rebels. The
Summit tackled security issues on the continent, including instability
in eastern DR Congo.
But in an interview with Radio France
Internationale (RFI) on Monday, Rwanda’s Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Louise Mushikiwabo said Rwanda will not consider negotiating with people
who are responsible for the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi.
“Those
who think that Rwanda today should sit down at the negotiating table
with FDLR simply don’t know what they are talking about,” she said
adding that it is unfortunate that the rebel group has sympathisers in
the region, including President Kikwete himself, should he not retract
his comments.
Mushikiwabo told the French broadcaster that she
did not expect President Kikwete to suggest that Rwanda negotiate with
known terrorists since he has served as a foreign affairs minister for
his county and knows the FDLR background.
Minister Mushikiwabo
pointed out that President Kikwete could be just another sympathiser
for the group whose ideology is still being fought in Rwanda and
worldwide.
“There are many spokespeople for the FDLR. Some are
ideologically aligned to the FDLR. We stopped the Genocide but we didn’t
stop the ideology,” she added.
The FDLR is made up of members
who are largely responsible for the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in
Rwanda. The group, named by the UN as a terrorist organisation, has been
involved in creating instability in eastern Congo along with several
armed militia roaming in the region and it attacked Rwanda twice last
year, killing two people.
Reactions from experts
At
the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the African Union- celebrated
last weekend in Addis Ababa, a meeting involving parties concerned by
the Addis Ababa Peace, Security, and Cooperation Framework for the
Democratic Republic of Congo and the region signed in February was held,
during which President Kikwete called for all-encompassing talks with
belligerents in the Congo.
He reportedly told participants at the
meeting, including Rwandan and Ugandan Presidents Paul Kagame and
Yoweri Museveni, that the recently deployed UN brigade will only be able
to help temporarily, essentially calling for all the concerned parties
to enter into talks with rebels.
The Tanzanian President
suggested that Rwanda engages in direct talks with the FDLR and that the
President Museveni holds talks with the rebels from the Allied
Democratic Forces-National Army for the Liberation of Uganda (ADF-NALU)
that is opposed to his government.
Several experts and analysts in Rwanda reacted to Kikwete’s comments with condemnation.
Professor
Pierre Rwanyindo, Director of the Kigali-based Institute of Research
and Dialogue for Peace (IRDP) told The New Times yesterday that
negotiations with the FDLR are simply impossible and Kikwete seems to
“ignore the history”.
“He (Kikwete) should first ask himself how
FDLR ended up in Congo since they are not Congolese. The Rwandan
government encourages all Rwandan refugees to return home, but the FDLR
just want to attack Rwanda because of the crimes they committed during
the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi,” Rwanyindo said.
Insult to Rwandans
The
Chairperson of Parliament’s Foreign Affairs committee, MP Gideon
Kayinamura, also said negotiating with the FDLR is insulting.
“You just don’t enter into negotiations with genocidaires. It’s an insult on Rwandans,” he said.
Alice Umutoni, a survivor of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi said that as Tanzania’s President, Kikwete should know better.
“Given
that the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) is based in
Tanzania, we have no doubt that President Kikwete has been following the
court proceedings and should comprehend the threat posed by the FDLR to
Rwanda’s and the region’s peace and security,” Umutoni said.
Last
month, the United States renewed its staked $5 million (about Rwf3.2
billion) for information leading to the arrest, transfer and conviction
of FDLR’s leader Sylvestre Mudacumura.
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