Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila is seeking Rwanda
and Uganda’s support to prolong his stay in office, as pressure mounts
on him to organise elections and to drop his bid to extend his current
term. TEA GRAPHIC | PHOTOS | FILE
By The EastAfrican Team
In Summary
- Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila is seeking Rwanda and Uganda’s support to prolong his stay in office, as pressure mounts on him to organise elections and to drop his bid to extend his current term.
- President Kabila is counting on Rwanda to help contain the Kinyarwanda-speaking Congolese who are up in arms against his government.
- Analysts of regional geopolitics see President Kabila’s quick successive visits to Uganda and Rwanda as a strategic move to pacify eastern DR Congo and use it as a stepping stone to extend his rule.
Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila is
seeking Rwanda and Uganda’s support to prolong his stay in office, as
pressure mounts on him to organise elections and to drop his bid to
extend his current term.
President Kabila last week met his Rwandan counterpart Paul
Kagame at the border town of Rubavu, where they were reported to
have discussed matters of “bilateral co-operation.” However, it is
understood that the Congolese leader was laying the ground for his next
political move.
President Kabila is under intense pressure from opposition
groups and donors who are urging him to step down and allow a new leader
to take over, with protests against him taking place countrywide.
Reliable sources indicate that President Kabila, who a week
before meeting President Kagame had met his Ugandan counterpart Yoweri
Museveni, is seeking support from leaders in the Great Lakes region to
help him deal with mounting pressure.
Opposition groups, including rebel groups forming in the east of
the country, are threatening to wage a war against the government if
President Kabila goes for a third term.
Alexis Byicaza Sebatware, the head of a new group called Les
Forces Novatrices pour Union et la Démocratie Congolaise (Innovative
Forces for Union and Congolese Democracy) said that President Kabila’s
trips are aimed at achieving his goal of staying in power.
“We know his plan. But we have given him an ultimatum to
organise elections and hand over power,” said Mr Sebatware. “If he
doesn’t, we are ready to pick up arms against his government and our aim
will be to split the country into two independent states because he has
refused to respect the Constitution.”
President Kabila faces resistance in eastern DR Congo, where his
onetime ally and now rival Moise Katumbi, enjoys huge support. Mr
Katumbi, a wealthy and popular businessman and leader of opposition,
remains in exile after he left the country in May to seek treatment
following an attack by security forces. A lengthy sentence and more
charges, including threatening state security, await him.
Protests in Beni
Last week, protests against President Kabila continued in the
town of Beni, in eastern DR Congo, where security forces shot at
hundreds of demonstrators in an attempt to disperse them.
With resistance mounting in eastern DR Congo, President Kabila
is counting on Rwanda to help contain the Kinyarwanda-speaking Congolese
who are up in arms against his government.
Analysts of regional geopolitics see President Kabila’s quick
successive visits to Uganda and Rwanda as a strategic move to pacify
eastern DR Congo and use it as a stepping stone to extend his rule.
With the issue of M23 remaining in the way, President Kabila
fears that a volatile eastern DR Congo would threaten his chances of
seeking another term in office. Hundreds of M23 former fighters remain
in Rwanda and Uganda, almost four years after an agreement was reached
to repatriate them and reintegrate them back in the two countries.
According to sources privy to the talks between the three heads
of state, the Congolese president promised to address the matter “with
finality.”
Rwanda and Uganda were accused by the UN Group of Experts of
backing the rebels who waged war in eastern Congo in April 2012, even
though both countries denied the accusations.
In return, Mr Kabila promised Rwanda and Uganda “full
co-operation” in dealing with the two rebel groups — Democratic Forces
for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) and the Allied Democratic Forces
(ADF).
Arrest of Rwandan rebel commander
On Monday, days after the meeting between Presidents Kabila and
Kagame, it was announced that Congolese government forces arrested a
commander of the FDLR rebel group. FDLR, an outfit of Hutu militias
accused of taking part in the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, has been
active in eastern DR Congo for two decades.
According to the UN’s Radio Okapi, Maj Sabimana Iraguha, alias
Mugisha Vanqueur, a commander of the FDLR’s military wing, the Forces
Combattantes Abacunguzi, was captured last Thursday and paraded before
the media on Friday, in the provincial capital, Goma. Rwanda has in the
past accused the DR Congo and UN of showing no will to deal with the
FDLR menace.
Uganda, Rwanda and DRC have been at loggerheads at different
points in the past 22 years, despite the former two working together to
install Laurent Desire Kabila, after deposing Mobutu Sese Seko in
1997. Joseph Kabila took over in 2001 after his father was
assassinated.
In Rwanda, President’s Kabila and Kagame committed to
strengthening mutual efforts to revitalise bilateral relations,
including the enhancing of diplomatic relations between Rwanda and the
DRC.
“The two sides exchanged on several topics regarding mutual
interest and agreed to strengthen bilateral cooperation, particularly in
the areas of cross-border trade and energy, specifically in the
extraction of methane gas from Lake Kivu,” reads the joint statement
signed by DRC and Rwandan officials.
Meanwhile, the US has warned that President Kabila’s decision to
hold onto power will escalate further violence in the already volatile
mineral-rich nation.
“Countries where incumbents try to change the rules to stay in
power are five times more likely to face violence and instability,”
Thomas Perriello, the State Department’s special envoy to the Great
Lakes region of Africa said last week while speaking at the Brookings
Institution in Washington.
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