Saturday, January 10, 2009

- - -

Ban Ki-moon backs proposed European force for DRC

Sunday 30 November 2008

UN Secretary General Ban-Ki-moon told Belgium's Foreign Minister Karel De Gucht that he supported the idea of an interim EU peacekeeping mission until the extra 3,000 troops agreed to for the UN's MONUC force are dispatched.

Sunday 30 November 2008

(AFP) - UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is in favour of sending an interim European force to Democratic Republic of Congo until peacekeeping reinforcements, Belgium's foreign minister said Sunday.
   
The UN Security Council has approved an additional 3,000 peacekeepers for the Congo mission, but the deployment "is going to take some time," Karel De Gucht told Belgium's VRT television.
   
"For that reason, the United Nations hopes that an European military force could come and fill in the gap during this period," De Gucht said.
   
His spokesman Bart Ouvry told AFP that Ban had talked about an interim European force during De Gucht's discussions with him this week at UN headquarters in New York.
   
The UN secretary general explained that help was needed to ease the humanitarian crisis caused by the fighting between rebels and Congolese government forces in eastern Nord-Kivu province.
   
"The reinforcement of 3,000 soldiers is going to take several months, and in the interval Mr Ban Ki-moon thinks that an European interim force would be needed," if it could be deployed, Ouvry said.
   
He added, however, that Belgium would have to see how many European countries would be willing to contribute troops to such a force.
   
The question is expected to be taken up at ministerial talks next week at NATO headquarters in Brussels, as well as at an Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) meeting in Helsinki.
   
Last month Belgium and France proposed sending troops to Nord-Kivu province, the central battleground of the conflict, to support the humanitarian efforts of the UN Mission in Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC).
   
Belgium was the colonial power in Congo before its independence in June 1960, while France -- which holds the rotating EU presidency, and which put the resolution for more MONUC troops before the Security Council -- has a long-standing interest in central Africa.
   
But several EU member states, including Germany, are not in favour of military support -- preferring to back humanitarian organisations and political mediation.
   
Long simmering tensions between the Kinshasa government and rebels led by Tutsi ex-general Laurent Nkunda spilled over into a new conflict in August, displacing 250,000 people and creating a humanitarian disaster.
   
Calls for an EU force to help protect civilians in eastern Congo have also come from a group of former world leaders.
   
In an open letter Thursday, the group, including Nobel Peace Prize winners Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former South African president F. W. de Klerk, urged EU leaders to use their "personal political leadership" to help ease the crisis.
   
"The situation in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo is a clear humanitarian catastrophe," they wrote, noting that "the peacekeeping force on the ground is currently unable to protect the hundreds of thousands of civilians at risk."
   


 

  • 02/12/2008 23:57:29 Alert a moderator

    Europeans : defeat Nkunda and seal the Rwandan border

    It took a long time for some frightfully shortsighted European countries to realize a full size genocide was in the making in the Kivu; It would only be the third involving Rwanda and their ever entreprising mercenary, the self proclamed pastor-general Nkunda.
    This is the time for military action ; the imposter who poses as the leader of the congolese Banyamulenge community must be militarily anhilited and exiled, the border with Rwanda shut for the foreseable future except for UN controlled checkpoints at Goma and Bukavu.
    This would allow the Congolese people to benefit at long last of their vast resources, of the help offered by the UN and EU to train their army, restore governance and, finally, decide for themselves of what type of relationship they want to establish with their neighbours.
    None of this will be possible as long as Kagame is allowed to bully and plunder the natural resources of the RDC ; He has brought indicible suffering on the local population over the past ten years (three wars in 10 years!) and should not be forgiven for it.
    Now the European nations will put an end to this criminal sececionist endeavour, they should with the USA, (if only Hillary Clinton severs the dubious ties her husband had established with the master of Kigali) clearly point out to those responsible for the horrors of this war and help enact the resolutions of Naroibi and the Amani plan

  • 02/12/2008 22:14:38 Alert a moderator

    Free our Congo

    There is no way to stop what is in the heart of Congolese people, we want to free our lovely country and no one can stop us.

    Even if Western people took the fact of childs soldier as an argument, OUR Congo will be free. The love of it is above vengeance and sorrow, we are a peaceful people.

  • 02/12/2008 09:35:00 Alert a moderator

    A request

    I request the secretary general of UN. Mr. Ban k-moon that the idea of sending European troops and France inclusive may hinder and stablise peace process in Congo. As you know the history of France in the great lakes region particulary Rwanda .France came to Rwanda in 1994 with military force which was called "Zone Turqoise" and their stated mission was to surpport the hummanitarian efforts.but when they reached to the ground it was a different case. they started equiping and arming Interahamwe militias who were mundering people.
    Better other European states not France

  • 30/11/2008 22:12:40 Alert a moderator

    Freedom for congo

    Let's keep fighting for our freedom, please sign and pass the petition below and stand with us as we fight end this genocide and regain our freedom and that of our people:

    http://www.petition.fm/petitions/regain_our_freedom/

    UNITED WE STAND

  • 30/11/2008 08:19:28 Alert a moderator

    fight and talk

    this is the same techn those guys have been using. Uganda, Rwanda and now in Congo. Do not be mislead by them. Time will tell.

News Briefs
Weather
Currently
  • New York
    Clear.  Chilly.
    0°C
  • Rio de Janeiro
    Passing clouds.  Warm.
    25°C
  • London
    Ice fog.  Chilly.
    -2°C
  • Paris
    Ice fog.  Cold.
    -10°C
  • Moscow
    Partly cloudy.  Cold.
    -11°C
  • Istanbul
    Clear.  Chilly.
    -1°C
  • Mumbai / Bombay
    Passing clouds.  Cool.
    14°C
  • Beijing
    Sunny.  Cold.
    -8°C
  • Tokyo
    Passing clouds.  Cool.
    8°C
  • Shanghai
    Sunny.  Chilly.
    -3°C
  • Sydney
    Broken clouds.  Mild.
    21°C
  • Johannesburg
    Clear.  Mild.
    20°C