|
Home / Contact / Stories,
News & Reports / Photos
Worldwide Gay Life,
Sites and Insights
Stories + Photographs + News + Reports + Links
Congo
News & Reports
Useful
website for LGBT Africa: http://www.mask.org.za/
1 U.N. Forces Using Tougher Tactics to Secure
Peace 5/05
2 "Sexual and reproductive rights are human rights"8/08
New York
Times (non-gay
background story)
1
U.N. Forces Using Tougher Tactics to Secure
Peace
May 23,
2005
by Marc Lacey in NairobiI, Kenya
The United
Nations, burdened by its inability to stave off the mass killings
in Rwanda in 1994 and by failed missions
in Bosnia and Somalia, is allowing its peacekeepers to mount some
of the most aggressive operations in its history.
The change has been evolving over the last decade, as the Security
Council has adopted the notion of "robust peacekeeping" and
rejected the idea that the mere presence of blue-helmeted soldiers
on the ground helps quell combat.
It is most obvious in Congo, which commands by far the largest
deployment of United Nations troops in the world. Peacekeepers
in armored personnel
carriers, facing enemy sniper attacks as they lumber through rugged
dirt paths in the eastern Ituri region, are returning fire. Attack
helicopters swoop down over the trees in search of tribal fighters.
And peacekeepers are surrounding villages in militia strongholds
and searching hut by hut for guns.
"
The ghost of Rwanda lies very heavily over how the U.N. and the Security
Council have chosen to deal with Ituri," said David Harland,
a top official at the United Nations Department of Peacekeeping
Operations
in New York.
A turning point came in 2000 after rebels in Sierra Leone killed
some peacekeepers and took hundreds more hostage. The United Nations
commissioned
a review, headed by Lakhdar Brahimi, a former foreign minister
of Algeria, which called for troops to be deployed more rapidly
in peace
enforcement
operations. "No amount of good intentions can substitute for the
fundamental ability to project credible force," the so-called
Brahimi Report said.
Recently a commander in eastern Congo, a Bangladeshi colonel named
Hussain Mahmud Choudhury, pointed at a huge map in his office in
Bunia, the regional capital, to show a reporter where his troops
had been
chasing the militias. "Here, here, here," he said, banging
on the map. "
If we hear they are somewhere, we move in," he said. "We
don't get them all the time, but they have to run. Their morale
is shattered, and from a military point of view, that is everything."
The peacekeepers in Haiti, as well, are using Chapter VII of the
United Nations Charter, which allows them to protect their soldiers
or innocent
civilians by using force. Peace missions in Liberia, Sierra Leone,
Kosovo, Burundi and Ivory Coast - each with its own rules of engagement
- have also moved well beyond the traditional notion of peacekeeping
in which blue helmets occupy a neutral zone between former combatants.
But nowhere do war and peace seem as cloudy as in Congo, where
peacekeepers received a beefed-up mandate from the Security Council
in 2003 -
and where at least one human rights group has complained of civilian
casualties. "
The trend over the last decade is that you deal with many factions,
factions that don't always have a political agenda and that are not
always committed to peace," said Margaret Carey, an Africa specialist
at the United Nations' peacekeeping office. "Ituri is an extreme
example."
The operation in Congo began as a modest observer mission in 1999.
It has mushroomed, now commanding 16,500 soldiers - but is still
regarded as understaffed by United Nations officials in New York.
After the failed missions of the 1990's, Western countries began
contributing significantly fewer troops overseas. In 1998, about
45 percent of peacekeepers
came from Western armies. The figure is now less than 10 percent;
most now come from the developing world.
In Congo, most of the peacekeepers are Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis
and Nepalese.
As they root out the insurgents who prey on Ituri's population,
United Nations soldiers in the east have at their disposal tanks,
armored
personnel carriers, Mi-25 attack helicopters, mortars and rocket-propelled
grenade launchers - all of which are getting heavy use.
"
It may look like war but it's peacekeeping," said Lt. Gen. Babacar
Gaye of Senegal, the force commander in Congo, of the largest and
most robust of the 18 United Nations peacekeeping operations around
the
world.
At a militia camp in Kagaba recently, the peacekeepers backed up
besieged Congolese troops and engaged in a running battle with
ethnic Lendu
fighters.
In March, after an ambush that killed nine Bangladeshi peacekeepers,
the United Nations forces raided a crowded market near Loga to
root out fighters preying on the local population. The peacekeepers
also
conduct what they call "cordon and search" operations,
which are essentially hunts for weaponry in remote villages.
Their opponents are tribal fighters who ignored the United Nations
deadline of April 1 for disarming. A last opportunity to comply
is approaching; after that, the peacekeepers say they will get
even
tougher. As the United Nations has become more aggressive, many
tribal warriors
have disarmed. Of the 15,000 fighters that the United Nations estimates
once operated in Ituri, nearly 14,000 have turned in their weapons.
The holdouts are fierce, and show no signs of surrendering.
In February, militia fighters ambushed a group of Bangladeshi soldiers
on a foot patrol around a camp of displaced people. Nine peacekeepers
were killed, then mutilated.
On May 12, another Bangladeshi patrol was ambushed. This time,
six were wounded and one was killed. At a memorial service, Dominique
Aitouyahia-McAdams, the top civilian in the United Nations operation
in Bunia, said the
death would only embolden the operation in its quest for peace.
She
called those who killed the peacekeepers "remnant militia
bandits still marauding in the district."
General Gaye was in Bunia the other day to attend a lavish ceremony
for the first anniversary of a peace deal that the militias signed,
agreeing to give up their guns. Since that declaration, one of
the half dozen militias in Ituri has disbanded, and others have
shrunk
to small bands. Various militia leaders have been arrested by the
Congolese, with help from peacekeepers.
But the ceremony occurred a day after the memorial service, demonstrating
that the job was not done. United Nations peacekeepers in Congo
were not always so gung-ho. For years, they were criticized for huddling
in their camps as
atrocities recurred in the countryside. Now, some critics condemn
them for being
too aggressive. And critics also denounce the sexual abuse of girls
by some peacekeepers.
Justice Plus, a rights group based in Bunia, lamented that when
the peacekeepers raided the market near Loga some civilians "paid
with their life while the mandate of the United Nations was to
protect them."
The get-tough approach wins praise from those in Bunia who remember
when, just two years ago, it was a battlefield between rival Hema
and Lendu militias.
As Lendu militias chased Hemas out of Bunia in May 2003, Lea Assamba,
17, was confronted by armed Lendu men and threatened with death.
She said she explained to them frantically that she was not a Hema
but
someone from another tribe, one not involved in Ituri's madness.
The militiamen made her suffer nonetheless. They killed a Hema
girl standing by, and her body fell on Lea. They made her balance
on her
head the decapitated head of a Hema man, she said. The stranger's
blood dripped down on her.
Lea escaped but was confronted by more marauding militias down
the road. They shot some people standing next to her, and she dropped
to the ground as they did. They died. She, covered with blood,
was
left
for dead.
"
Things would not be good if Monuc went away," Lea said, using
the French acronym for the United Nations mission in Congo.
But not far from Bunia, awful things continue. Villagers are on
the run. Men with guns and machetes chase them. In the midst of
it, heavily
armed United Nations soldiers are trying to extend their reach.
They engage in something shy of war but also a long way from peace.
Marc Lacey reported from Bunia, Congo, and Nairobi for this article.
msmandhiv.org
http://www.msmandhiv.org/documents/SA_ngo_DRCreport.pdf
2 August 2008
2
"Sexual and reproductive rights are human rights"
Report
I. Introduction
On 2 August 2008, Si Youth Knew, an association of young feminists Congolese gathered in Kinshasa, representatives of major women's organizations, defense of human rights, health programs, media professionals and youth exchange, discuss and see how to engage the promotion, protection and defense of sexual and reproductive rights of LGBTI people of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The seminar-workshop scheduled to start on 17 May 2008 to commemorate the world day against homophobia, has been postponed twice due to lack of funding.
It is therefore with pleasure If Youth Knew welcomed the positive response of the "collaborative effort of ACTON URGENT FUND-Africa has fully funded the project.
The seminar-workshop was also financial participation of the African Bureau of International lesbians and gay human rights commission (ILGHRC) which took over the hosting of a participant from the province of Maniema to 1800 km from Kinshasa.
The office of the United Nations for Human Rights (BNUDH) had also agreed to issue three promissory notes free of aircraft that 3 sexual rights activists, representing the association Swallow Group (RI) working in partnership with Youth If Knew powerful rally Bukavu in South Kivu in Kinshasa
Unfortunately circumstances beyond the goodwill of the Office of the United Nations for Human Rights (BNUDH) have enabled its participants to move to the capital.
Read The Entire Report |