"The Democratic Republic of Congo has called for boosting the UN peacekeeping force in the central African country to "neutralise" a rebel group known as M23, and accused neighbouring Rwanda of backing the group.
Raymond Tshibanda N'tunga Mulongo, Congo's foreign affairs minister, on Friday called on the Security Council to impose sanctions on those named in a UN report in July that accused high-ranking Rwandan officials of helping to create, arm and support the M23 rebel group within the country - as well as the rebel movement's leaders."
He held a news conference after discussions this week with the Security Council and the panel that wrote the July report."
I am surprised he has spoken out actually.
"We believe that all the consequences must be drawn from the conclusions in the report of the group of experts and that sanctions should eventually be envisaged," Tshibanda told the news conference at the UN on Saturday.
Mulongo said there was still a "war situation" between the two neighbours over the rebellion even though tensions have eased."
Well not according to Rwanda.
Well not according to Rwanda.
"The report accused Rwanda's Defence Minister James Kaberebe; Chief of Defence Staff Charles Kayonga; and General Jacques Nziza, a military adviser to President Paul Kagame, of being "in constant contact with M23".
Louise Mushikiwabo, Rwanda's foreign minister, who has denied the accusations, was also at the UN headquarters this week meeting with the panel and council members to protest the report's findings.
M23 rebels, who have links to Bosco Ntaganda, a warlord wanted by the International Criminal Court on war crimes charges, have been fighting government soldiers in North Kivu province since April, displacing some 470,000 civilians."
This is established by the evidence collected to date.
This is established by the evidence collected to date.
"Upsurge in violence
The fighting escalated in Congo's mineral-rich east when army deserters calling themselves the M23 Movement launched a rebellion to demand better pay, better armaments and amnesty from war crimes.
The conflict in the east is a spillover from the 1994 genocide. Hundreds who participated in the mass slaughter escaped into Congo and still fight there. The M23 rebels are an embodiment of a group of Congolese Tutsi set up to fight Rwandan Hutu rebels in Congo.
Mulongo said that all of Congo's borders are quiet except for the border with Rwanda.
Instead of trying to introduce a second foreign force to help bring peace to the volatile east, he said his government wants the Security Council to beef up the mandate of the 22,000-strong UN peacekeeping force to address the escalating violence."
I fail to see what an all Africa force can achieve that the UN can't other than open the door to more African crocodiles as has happened in the past.
'Eradicating negative forces'
Kigali has repeatedly rejected the allegations and accused the UN report's authors of failing to verify their information or consult Rwandan authorities.
Major donors the US, Britain, the Netherlands and Germany have all suspended some of their financial aid to Rwanda over its alleged backing of the rebels.
Rwanda has repeatedly backed armed movements in its eastern neighbour during the last two decades, citing a need to tackle Rwandan rebels operating out of Congo's eastern hills."
Rwanda has real territorial ambitions for the DR Congo and needs to be stopped now. Invasion is little more than an armed home invasion on an international scale at this stage, it needs to be stopped in its tracks now.
"Tshibanda also echoed earlier calls by Joseph Kabila, Congo's president, for a new mandate for the country's UN peacekeeping mission that would include stamping out the armed groups that have destabilised the east for nearly two decades.
The UN mission, known as MONUSCO, has more than 17,000 troops, but the force is stretched thin across a nation the size of Western Europe and already struggles to fulfill its current mandate of protecting civilians.
"It is important that the mandate of MONUSCO be amended and be strengthened," the foreign affairs minister told reporters."
I have been saying much the same for some time now the forces rules of engagement need to change.
"Right now it does not have the mandate of monitoring and protecting the border, it does not have the mandate of neutralising, eradicating the negative forces," he said.
UN helicopter gunships frequently back up outgunned government forces but even that firepower failed to prevent rebels from taking several towns last month."
It wouldn't if the UN were allowed to engage and attack rather than defend only, if a rebel dies at UN hands it is an accident. That needs to change if the UN are to shut this insurgency down.
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