A group of Rwandan rebels could pull the Democratic Republic of
Congo into yet another armed conflict, the DRC’s United Nations
ambassador has told the UN Security Council.
Ignace
Gata Mavita wa Lufuta told a Council session reviewing the status of the
Great Lakes region that P5, a coalition of Rwandan opposition groups
led by exiled general Kayumba Nyamwasa, receives weapons and ammunition
from “a neighbouring country.”
While the envoy did not
name the country in question, he called attention to a recent report by a
UN Panel of Experts that cites Burundi as the source of those supplies.
Such
shipments would violate a UN arms embargo that applies to all groups in
the DRC except government forces and the UN’s peacekeeping force —
Monusco.
The panel attributes the Burundi-P5 weapons connection to several former P5 combatants whom it interviewed.
Tanzania and South Africa, as well as Burundi, are also sources of recruits for P5, the ex-combatants told UN experts.
The panel asked for clarification from the Burundi government on
these matters but received no reply to its request, the report states.
But
the P5 has never staged attacks on Rwandan territory, the former
fighters told the UN group, instead they “attacked what they thought
were Burundian rebel groups active within the Congolese territory.”
The eastern DRC, the region where P5 operates, is already the scene of multiple armed conflicts involving scores of militias.
Said
Djinnit, UN Special envoy for the Great Lakes Region, described these
armed units as “negative forces” in his presentation to the Security
Council, saying their presence in eastern DRC “perpetuates insecurity
and mistrust between some countries.”
But he gave a
generally upbeat assessment of the peace and security situation in the
Great Lakes region in what served as a farewell address.
Mr
Djinnit, an Algerian diplomat, is stepping down this month after more
than four years in the Great Lakes posting. Noting “important steps
towards durable peace and stability” during the past two decades, he
said the Great Lakes region is now “largely peaceful.”
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