DR Congo: Warring
Sides Must Protect Civilians
UN Peacekeepers Must
Also Help Civilians at Risk in North Kivu
(Brussels, December 11, 2007)
– All sides to the renewed fighting in the eastern part of the
Democratic Republic of Congo must protect civilians at risk, Human
Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch also called on United
Nations peacekeepers in the area to strengthen their civilian protection
efforts.
In the eastern province of
North Kivu, the Congolese army last week launched a major military
offensive against dissident soldiers loyal to renegade general Laurent
Nkunda. Government troops advanced close to the town of Kirolirwe, one
of Nkunda’s strongholds in Masisi territory, some 35 kilometers
northwestof the provincial capital of Goma. According to UN figures,
Kirolirwe harbors an estimated 45,000 civilians, the majority of whom
are ethnic Tutsi.
Nkunda, himself a Tutsi, says
he is fighting to protect the Tutsi population against ethnically
motivated attacks from other Congolese groups and from a Rwandan
opposition force called the Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (Forces
démocratiques de la libération du Rwanda, FDLR), some of whose leaders
participated in the anti-Tutsi genocide in Rwanda in 1994.
In recent days Nkunda’s troops
put up stiff resistance and, at latest report, had driven government
troops back from earlier gains to positions near the town of Sake,
location of many previous battles.
“Under the laws of war,
government and rebel forces alike must protect civilians during military
operations,” said Anneke Van Woudenberg , senior Congo researcher at
Human Rights Watch . “But almost every time these belligerents have
fought each other, they have killed, raped and looted civilians. These
abuses must stop.”
On December 7, provincial
authorities and military officials urged Kirolirwe residents to flee to
zones under government control, but they failed to provide information
on evacuation arrangements or ensure that the humanitarian needs of the
displaced civilians would be met. On Sunday, a UN humanitarian mission
visited Kirolirwe to examine possible alternatives, but to date no
solution has been found.
The laws of war call on all
parties to a conflict to give effective advance warning of attacks that
affect the civilian population. Warring parties must take all feasible
precautions to minimize harm to civilians, and they must protect
civilians under their control against the effects of attacks. They must
allow and facilitate humanitarian aid for civilians in need.
Civilians, many of whom have
already fled hostilities in their home areas to the south, fear that if
they flee Kirolirwe protected by Nkunda’s forces, they and their
livestock will be attacked by a militia called the Coalition of
Congolese Patriotic Resistance (Patriotes résistants du Congo, PARECO)
or by the FDLR. Both
PARECO and FDLR combatants are said to have joined recent operations by
Congolese government troops against Nkunda’s forces.
Away from the frontlines,
armed groups continue to prey on the local population with impunity. A
hospital in Masisi reported daily arrivals of civilians who have been
the victims of violent attacks, including women and girls who have been
raped. Near Chamarambo, for example, a 13-year-old girl was gang raped
at gun point by three combatants she identified as part of PARECO. In
the same area, three women were raped and then shot, one fatally. Near
Mianja, a man was shot in both legs by unidentified armed men for
refusing to hand over a goat.
All parties to the conflict in
North Kivu – including the Congolese army, troops under the command of
Nkunda, and combatants from the FDLR and PARECO – have committed serious
crimes against civilians, including killings, rape, forced displacement,
looting and the use of child soldiers. In a detailed report published in
October, Human Rights Watch documented abuses against civilians during
18 months of armed conflict.
The recent combat has
increased local hostility against the Congolese Tutsi population, seen
by other groups as the main supporters of Nkunda.
But Tutsi civilians have also
suffered displacement and abuse, including from those who claim to be
protecting them.
Since late 2006, the conflict
in North Kivu has displaced some 400,000 persons, adding to the burden
on humanitarian agencies already trying to assist hundreds of thousands
of others displaced by earlier stages of the fighting. In recent weeks,
the growing insecurity and heavy rains have made it more difficult for
humanitarian agencies to deliver assistance and have slowed commercial
traffic between population centers in Masisi and Rutshuru territories,
driving up prices and further increasing vulnerability.
UN peacekeepers have a mobile
base in Kirolirwe in addition to bases in other locations in North Kivu
and say they will remain as long as civilians are at risk. There are
currently more than 17,000 UN peacekeeping troops in Congo, with some
4,500 based in North Kivu. Their mandate includes protecting civilians,
including by the use of armed force if necessary. In the recent past, UN
troops have pulled out of combat areas in North Kivu when they believed
their own lives were at risk.
This week, UN Security Council
members in New York will begin discussing the renewal of the mandate of
the UN mission in Congo, known as MONUC (Mission de l’ONU en RD Congo).
The mandate is due to expire on December 31.
“Security Council members must
ensure the blue helmets in Congo have a strong mandate to protect
vulnerable civilians and the means to carry it through,” said Van
Woudenberg. “Those who have suffered so much in these years of war must
not be abandoned when the fighting draws near.”
To view the October 2007
Human Rights Watch report, “Renewed Crisis in North Kivu,” please visit:
http://hrw.org/reports/2007/drc1007/
For more information,
please contact:
In London/Congo, Anneke Van
Woudenberg
(English, French): +44-77-11-
66-4960 (mobile) or
+243-(0)81-085-2407; or
In London, Alison Des Forges
(English, French):
+44-20-7713-2781
In Brussels, Juliette Le Dore
(English, French):
+32-485-795-073
In New York, Lance Lattig (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese):
+1-212-216-1866