PARIS, France
French President Emmanuel Macron has said he supports a political resolution of the tensions between Rwanda and DR Congo, the Elysee Palace said in a statement.
On Wednesday, March 20, Macron
had a telephone conversation with Angolan President Joao Lourenço, who is the
mediator between the two countries under the African
Union-backed Luanda process.
The Luanda process, named
after the Angolan capital, is an initiative of the International Conference on
the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) which was introduced in mid-2022 to settle the
diplomatic tensions that arose from the conflict
between the Congolese government and the M23 rebels in North Kivu
province in eastern DR Congo.
Macron “welcomed the Angolan
President's commitment to the situation in Eastern Congo, particularly his
recent diplomatic initiatives, and reiterated his full support for these
regional mediation processes to find a negotiated solution to the conflict,” the Elysee
Palace said in a statement on Wednesday.
Following months of
belligerent rhetoric by Congolese leaders and multiple calls to return to
negotiations, the Luanda
process was revived by regional leaders at a meeting in the Ethiopian
capital on February 16.
As a follow-up on the Addis
Ababa meeting, on February 27, Lourenço hosted Congolese President Felix
Tshisekedi, who reportedly agreed to a meeting with his Rwandan counterpart
Paul Kagame.
Lourenço also received
President Kagame on March 11. According to Village Urugwiro, the two
leaders agreed
on steps towards addressing the root causes of the eastern DR Congo conflict and
the need to uphold the Luanda process and its sister initiative, the Nairobi
process, both of which seek to find a lasting solution to decades-old violence
in eastern DR Congo.
Rwanda accuses the Congolese
armed forces (FARDC) of integrating
the FDLR, a UN-sanctioned militia linked to the 1994 Genocide against the
Tutsi in Rwanda.
The FDLR is part of the
government-led coalition that includes Burundian forces, troops from the
Southern African Development Community (SADC), fighting M23 rebels.
The terrorist group poses a
threat to Rwanda and is accused of spreading
hate and violence against Congolese Tutsi communities.
Apart from the FDLR, root
causes of the violence in eastern DR Congo include decades-long persecution and
alienation of Kinyarwanda-speaking communities in the region.
The FDLR has whipped up violence
and hate speech against the Congolese communities, resulting in the exile
of hundreds of thousands of Congolese people. Rwanda alone hosts up to 100,000
of Congolese refugees, some of whom have lived in camps for nearly 30 years.
The FDLR was founded in May
2000 with the help of the Congolese political and military leaders – a fact
admitted by one of its founders and former vice president, Straton
Musoni, who now lives in Rwanda.
In an interesting twist of
events, and following mounting pressure, the Congolese army in November
2023 ordered
that all its soldiers end any contact with the FDLR. However,
the FDLR
remained integrated into the Congolese armed forces, according to the
Rwandan government.
The FDLR not only threatens DR
Congo’s security but has also launched attacks on Rwanda for more than two
decades. A 2019 attack by one of its factions killed
14 people in Musanze District.
Eastern DR Congo has been
volatile for nearly 30 years and remains home to more than 130 armed groups.
Multiple interventions have failed to end decades of violence.
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