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Thursday, June 30, 2022

Human rights under threat in DR Congo, UN Security Council told

The M23 militia began as a renegade force of army mutineers in 2012, committing atrocities and war crimes.

• June 30, 2022
M23 group
M23 group [Photo Credit: Al Jazeera]

UN special representative to Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) Bintou Keita says the resurgence of the M23 armed group has “broad repercussions” for the security, human rights and humanitarian situation in the country.

Ms Keita, who also heads the UN’s Stabilisation Mission in DRC (MONUSCO), told the Security Council on Wednesday that the peacekeepers under her command were “determined to protect civilians and help tackle drivers of conflict and violence.”

However, she added that “unity of purpose within the council and among troop and police contributing countries, remains essential for the Mission to deliver on its core mandated responsibilities.”

As MONUSCO along with the national security forces, known as the Armed Forces of the DRC (FARDC), have redeployed military to the ‘Petit Nord’ to respond to M23 threats, armed groups have sought to take advantage of the resulting security vacuum.

The M23 militia began as a renegade force of army mutineers in 2012, committing atrocities and war crimes. The current offensive against government forces is reportedly the biggest in a decade.

Increased assaults by Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) militants in North Kivu and Ituri provinces, as well as attacks and reprisals by the Cooperative for Development of the Congo (CODECO) and other militia, have taken a heavy toll on the civilian population.

The UN official said the attack took a heavy toll on the civilian population, noting that between May 28 and June 17, no fewer than 150 civilians had been killed.

“The humanitarian situation across the eastern provinces has deteriorated, and the overall number of people displaced this year has risen to some 700,000,” she stated.

Meanwhile, the rising regional tensions had coincided with a deeply worrying increase in hate speech and incitement to violence.

Ms Keita highlighted that at least eight cases of hate speech between May and June that specifically targeted Rwandophones.

She said while each met the Rabat threshold – a six-part test to assess if a particular statement reaches the level of incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence – at least three came from Congolese military and police authorities.

“The United Nations has been clear in its condemnation of these reprehensible attempts to fuel inter-communal tensions,” she noted.

Ms Keita added that it was incumbent upon the Security Council to fully support regional efforts to defuse the current diplomatic and security tensions between neighbouring states and “put an end to the scourge of armed groups.”

“Should the M23 continue its well-coordinated attacks against FARDC and MONUSCO with increasing conventional capabilities, the mission may find itself confronted by a threat that goes beyond its current capabilities,” Ms Keita warned.

She also cautioned that the ongoing militia activities in eastern DRC threatened to reverse hard-won progress in security throughout the country and the region. The special representative updated the ambassadors on a $35 million dollars response plan for the M23-crisis, which was developed by the Humanitarian Country Team.

The humanitarian coordinator has allocated $5 million from the DRC Humanitarian Fund for the plan, to begin the response.

Moreover, the current crisis has triggered a request for the development of a Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) Rapid Response, to meet civilian needs in Ituri and North Kivu.

(NAN)

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