Feral Jundi

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Congo: U.N. Peace Mission Fueling Violence in Congo, Report Says

Filed under: Africa,Congo — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 7:00 AM

   Shameful.  The worlds largest peace keeping mission, and it is a total failure.  I actually think those in the U.N. who were responsible for managing such a cluster, should face a war crimes tribunal for allowing such a thing.

   Now if the U.N. were to pull their collective head out of their ass, and realize that if there is no peace to keep, then you do not send in peace keepers.  What needs to happen, is the conflict(s) must end, and the only way that happens is the two sides fight it out and to the victor go the spoils.  Or, the U.N. picks a side, and completely supports that side of the war by sending in war fighters with the mission of defeating the other side. All out warfare, and no half measures.

   You either contract it out to an Executive Outcomes type company, or assemble a coalition of actual war fighters from donor countries, or don’t do anything at all.  But all of that would take a mandate from the U.N. Security Council, and it would also take resolve and the will to fight a war like that.  Companies like EO are proof positive that a professional PMC could definitely do what has to be done, and I would say, for a reasonable price.  Much more reasonable that what the U.N. is paying for now, which is only doing more harm to the Congo. Shameful. –Matt

Edit: Here are some excerpts from the report, to include the summary, here at a blog called Congo Siasa.

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UN peace mission fueling violence in Congo, report says

Security force costing $1bn a year has not defeated Rwandan Hutu rebels or halted plunder of lucrative minerals, experts find

Wednesday 25 November 2009

The world’s biggest UN peacekeeping mission has been branded a failure by experts who say it is fueling a surge of murders and rapes in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

The UN security force of 25,000, estimated to cost more than $1bn a year, has proved unable to defeat Rwandan Hutu rebels or to halt the plunder of lucrative minerals in the east of the country, according to a scathing report.

Among the most damning findings of the UN-mandated Group of Experts is the free rein given to a military commander and war crimes suspect known as “The Terminator”, which the UN mission has previously denied.

The mission in North and South Kivu agreed to back Congo’s army in an offensive this year against the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), some of whose leaders helped to orchestrate Rwanda’s 1994 genocide.

The experts found: “Military operations have … not succeeded in neutralising the FDLR, have exacerbated the humanitarian crisis in the Kivus and have resulted in an expansion of CNDP [the Congolese Tutsi militia National Congress for the Defence of the People] military influence in the region.”

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Thursday, October 22, 2009

Africa: UN’s Congo Operation Under Scrutiny

Filed under: Afghanistan,Africa,Congo — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 2:08 PM

   I posted another story below this about the UN screwing the pooch on Afghanistan as well, when they sacked Peter Galbraith for speaking truth to power about the elections there.

   But the real star of this post, is the UN and their criminal work in the Congo.  I say criminal, because to sit there and allow these rapes and murders to happen, while standing there with a gun in your hand and calling yourself a peacekeeper, is beyond just incompetence–it is criminal. What happened to the Responsibility to Protect?  How do you allow this to continue and say that it is ok, while in the same breath calling yourselves peacekeepers?  Some heads need to roll on this one, and some top leadership needs to be held accountable. Or better yet, hire some professionals to do the job right, or don’t do the job at all.-Matt

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UN’s Congo operation under scrutiny

By Harvey Morris at the United Nations

Published: October 18 2009 23:15 | Last updated: October 18 2009 23:15

The strategy of the United Nations’ biggest peacekeeping force is under scrutiny following reports that government forces it is supporting in the Democratic Republic of the Congo have used wide-scale rape and murder as weapons of war.

Abuses committed in a campaign against rebels in the east of the country have been extensively catalogued by human rights organisations. They have now come to the fore with a claim by one of the UN’s own experts that the results of an 8-month UN-backed offensive have been “catastrophic”.

“Hundreds of thousands have been displaced, thousands raped, hundreds of villages burnt to the ground, and at least 1,000 civilians killed,” Philip Alston, the UN’s special rapporteur on extrajudicial executions, said in a statement last week after a 10-day visit to the DRC.

What Mr Alston termed the “nightmare situation” in the eastern Kivu region underlined the dilemma of peacekeepers required to conduct increasingly robust and proactive mandates handed to them by the UN Security Council with what their commanders often complain are inadequate resources.

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Monday, October 12, 2009

Legal News: Norwegian Security Contractors Launch Plea Against Congo Death Sentences

Filed under: Africa,Legal News — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 12:40 PM

   More news on the legal front for these poor guys.  I wish them well, but yet again, these guys are at the mercy of the legal system in the Congo.  What needs to happen is for the Norwegian government to put the full weight of diplomacy on this one, and demand a fair trial for these guys or have them sent to their home for trial.

    If there is doubt, as to who shot the driver and of the legal process in the Congo, then that is a huge red flag.  If they cannot do the job, then get them back to Norway and have the trial there.  Justice must be served, and if these guys are getting sucked into something political or anything other than justice and the rule of law, then they need to get out of there.  That is the right thing to do, and that is the least Norway can do in order to show respect for two men that had at once served them with service in the military. –Matt

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Guardian

Norwegians Tjostolv Moland (l) and Joshua French (r) attend a military tribunal in Kisangani, Democratic Republic of Congo. Photograph: Thomas Hubert/Reuters

Norwegian security contractors launch plea against Congo death sentences

 Monday 12 October 2009

Two Norwegian security contractors convicted of murder and espionage in the Democratic Republic of the Congo will tomorrow begin an appeal against their death sentences. Joshua French, 27, who spent part of his early childhood in Margate and holds dual British citizenship, was arrested with Tjostolv Moland, 28, in eastern Congo in May after their driver was found shot dead. The men denied shooting Abedi Kasongo in the head, and said he had been killed during an attack by unknown gunmen.

(more…)

Friday, August 14, 2009

Africa: U.S. Boots On Congo Ground

Filed under: Africa,Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , , , , — Matt @ 2:02 AM

    This is a joke, right?  I get the impression that Mr. O’Hanlon, like many journalists and authors out there, has completely written out of the dialogue any mention of PMC’s.  It’s as if they have all committed to the idea that security contractors are a bad idea, and that somehow a reworking of the military structure will solve the problems of manpower issues for these types of missions.

    I have news for you guys, kids these days are smart, and a program like this is still the military and it is still serving in a war zone.  How is that different, other than calling it something different?

   Further more, once you put these ‘safe and sane’ troops on the ground in the Congo, and they are confronted with a force of rebels that see an opportunity to go kinetic on this new style western force, what will these forces answer back with?  Will this new peace force answer rebel bullets and bombs, with high velocity love letters and flower bombs?  This kind of thinking is dangerous and idiotic to say the least, and I am highly skeptical.

   Perhaps Mr. O’Hanlon should get some shared reality, and talk to Eeben Barlow of Executive Outcomes about what is required in these countries if we really care to keep some kind of peace?

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