KINSHASA, DR Congo
The United Nations peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Monusco, will not exit the country by December 2024.
UN Undersecretary-General for
Peacekeeping Operations Jean-Pierre Lacroix, who visited the Congo this
weekend, said that December 31, 2024, which was supposed to be the date for the
total withdrawal of Monusco troops, has never formally been agreed on by all
the parties.
"I dispel this rumour,
especially as it has never been confirmed by the authorities, ourselves or the
Security Council. We are currently in a consultation phase, and the
humanitarian situation remains very worrying. We have met with members of civil
society, who have all asked us to stay in Ituri in particular," Mr Lacroix
said in Kinshasa.
Congolese authorities have
recently asked Monusco to reconsider its withdrawal plan, even as the mission
had already begun its disengagement, particularly in South Kivu, where it
withdrew completely and handed over to the Congolese army.
In 2023, bloody protests broke
out in North and South Kivu with the residents demanding the departure of this
mission, which has been present in the DRC since 1999.
But in July 2023, Congolese
Minister of Foreign Affairs Thérèse Kayikwamba informed the UN of the need to
"delay the withdrawal process" of Monusco due to the escalation of
violence in North Kivu.
Today, a ceasefire has given
way to relative peace in the region, with sporadic clashes between the rebel
M23 and Wazalendo, young people who support the Congolese army.
But the "security
vacuum" feared by the Congolese authorities is now manifesting in Ituri,
where Codeco and other armed groups are wreaking havoc and killing civilians.
According to Gracien Iracan, MP for Ituri province, "60 per cent of the
province is in the hands of armed groups and beyond the control of the
Congolese army.".
Monusco has pledged to
reinforce its positions in Ituri and continue supporting the Southern African
Development Community mission in the DRC.
"We are now mandated to
provide more support to Sami-DRC and with Monusco's resources. We talked about
the diplomatic efforts underway, which are very important, and which we support
both politically and in terms of the support we are going to give to the
verification mechanism and the ceasefire," Mr Lacroix said.
The diplomat welcomed the
de-escalation of violence in North Kivu, but noted that "we cannot say
that there is zero violence, of course, as you know. So there is a lot of work
to be done."
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