Despite M23 Defeat, Militias Still Threat to Congo
 Experts say action now needed on other insurgent groups still active in
the east.
 By Stewart McCartney <http://iwpr.net/people/stewartmccartney>  -
International
Justice - ICC <http://iwpr.net/programme/international-justice-icc>
  ACR Issue 373 <http://iwpr.net/report-news/acr-issue-373>,
 20 Nov 13

The authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) are triumphant at
the defeat of the M23 rebel group, but analysts warn that other rebel
groups will need to be subdued if peace is to be achieved in the east of
the country.

The DRC’s army, known as FARDC, announced it had defeated the rebel group
in early November, after an insurgency lasting 18 months. It was the
Congolese army’s first victory over a significant rebel group, and was
achieved with the help of a special 3,000-strong unit, the Force
Intervention Brigade (FIB), established within the United Nations
peacekeeping force MONUSCO.

Shortly after the army declared victory, M23 announced that it was ending
the insurgency in favour of “purely political means” for pursuing its
goals. A peace deal was due to be signed last week, but disagreements over
the wording meant that did not happen .

Ben Shepherd, an expert on central Africa at the Chatham House think tank
in London, told IWPR that building on the M23 surrender would depend on
whether the remaining militias were also defeated.

“There remains a veritable alphabet soup of other rebel groups, ranging in
outlook,” he said, in a reference to the acronyms used by the various
militias.

The aid agency Oxfam has said there are up to 30 rebel groups operating in
eastern DRC. Renewed confidence in the army has raised hopes that it could
now set about routing these other factions.

Dan Donovan, a regional analyst for the Foreign Policy Association, said
the victory had “demonstrated the effectiveness and cooperation of
Congolese forces and [the UN], delivering a warning shot to other rebel
groups that they can be defeated”.

In November 2012, M23 was strong enough to take the provincial centre of
Goma, but in more recent months, it has suffered from internal disputes and
dwindling support. After one power-struggle, its leader Bosco Ntaganda
crossed into Rwanda and surrendered this spring, and was sent to The Hague
to face trial by the International Criminal Court for a string of alleged
war crimes.

The Congolese national army, known as FARDC, exploited these weaknesses
with the assistance of the Force Intervention Brigade, which was equipped
with a tougher mandate than any other UN peacekeeping force.

Prior to the FIB’s deployment, MONUSCO had been criticised for failing to
prevent rebel attacks and to effectively intervene in battles, despite
having 18,000 troops on the ground.

The national army’s own operations were undermined by a lack of discipline
and poor motivation within its ranks. But the recent streamlining of
FARDC’s command and efforts to ensure that wages are paid on time have
helped boost morale.

Nevertheless, a UN source who spoke on condition of anonymity warned that
FARDC still had only limited capacity.

“Congolese security forces remain unable to effectively hold territorial
gains or police other areas,” the source said.

The UN source also warned that the very effectiveness of the FIB’s
intervention might make the UN’s regular peacekeeping forces less effective
instead of more so.

“[FIB’s] success has further dissuaded other MONUSCO contingents such as
Pakistani and Indian peacekeepers from undertaking more proactive activity
to safeguard civilians from rebels,” the UN source told IWPR. “Instead the
FIB is increasingly referred to for tasks other MONUSCO forces cannot or
will not perform, and now presents a ready excuse for inactivity.”


*NEXT UP, THE FDLR *

With M23 out of the way, one of the main militias remaining in the east is
FDLR, or Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda.

The FDLR has operated in the east for over a decade. Formed by Hutu forces
which fled Rwanda after the 1994 genocide which killed approximately
800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus, it is thought to rely largely on income
from mining in North and South Kivu. In 2009, a panel of UN experts
estimated that the militia was making millions of dollars a year from the
trade in minerals.

Kinshasa is now keen to consolidate its military gains by pursuing the
FDLR, again with backup from MONUSCO.

Given the FLDR’s prominence and links to other rebel factions, a successful
operation against this militia could “facilitate efforts to tackle other
remaining armed groups”, according to Maria Eriksson Baaz of the Nordic
Africa Institute in Sweden.

But while the 1,500-strong FDLR has carried out few notable attacks in
recent months, it remains a well-trained, well-armed and structured group
that occupies remote territory.

Stephanie Wolters of the Institute for Security Studies in South Africa,
describes the FDRL as a “much harder opponent” than M23, pointing out that
its long-term presence in the region has given it local connections and a
sound knowledge of the terrain.

“The defeat of M23 may result in some defections [within FDLR] but the hard
core will fight on and will likely endure a protracted campaign,” she said.

One major complication is that DRC’s government is said to have delivered
support to the ethnically Hutu FDLR in the past to enable it to fight
against M23, which largely consists of Tutsis.

According to Thierry Vircoulon, an expert on central Africa with the
International Crisis Group, there are still “residual contacts” between
elements of the national army and FDLR forces. Such contacts could
undermine any future military operations.

“This may create difficulties for the FARDC in terms of operational
security,” the UN source said.


*DISMANTLING M23 PERMANENTLY   *

As the government switches its attention to the FDLR and other groups,
there are questions about what should happen to former combatants from M23.

Despite last week’s false start, a formal peace deal is still expected to
be signed, analysts are warning against repeating the mistake of
integrating former rebel fighters into the FARDC.

They say this strategy has been tried before and has manifestly failed.
(For more, see Will Kinshasa Go Easy on M23 Rebels?
http://iwpr.net/report-news/will-kinshasa-go-easy-m23-rebels .)

Most of the M23’s fighters used to belong to another mainly Tutsi rebel
group, the CNDP (National Congress for Defence of the People,), and were
incorporated into the national army after a peace deal signed on March 23,
2009 (hence the group’s name). They defected in April 2012, complaining
that the government had not kept its promises to them.

“Some of the M23 core may have been integrated into the FARDC three times
and have deserted three times,” Shepherd said. “This revolving door has
proven hugely damaging to FARDC morale and would be disastrous to repeat.
It also remains essential to break the pattern of securing advancement
through arms and this breakage must begin somewhere.”

There are signs that the government may have learnt from these experiences.

Foreign Minister Raymond Tshibanda has signalled a tougher stance against
former combatants, insisting that some will be prosecuted, particularly
those at the top of the command structure like military chief Sultani
Makenga, currently in custody in Uganda.

“Makenga must answer for the crimes he has committed,” Tshibanda said. “In
any case, in the discussions we held in Kampala, it was clear there would
be no amnesty for war crimes [or] crimes against humanity.”

Vircoulon said there was scope for prosecuting top leaders.

“Given the fact that the military commanders of the M23 have a 20-year war
history behind them in the region, there is plenty of room for
prosecution,” he said, adding that he was optimistic that the government
would not try to appease the rebels by re-absorbing them into the army.

He said the government’s new-found confidence meant it was “closing the
door” on such former tactics.

“Now that the DRC government is in a position of strength, the message is
that armed groups and rebellions won’t be politically and militarily
accommodated any more,” he said.

Others believe that reintegration is still a possible solution for
rank-and-file combatants, as long as they are not deployed on their home
ground in North and South Kivu.

Wolters said that while ethnic Tutsis from M23 might be unwilling to serve
outside the region, redeploying and distributing them among different army
units might be a better option than allowing them to remain intact where
they were.

“If the former rebels are separated from one another, their ability to pose
a threat is much reduced, and this strategy is essential if the mistakes of
the past are not to be repeated,” Wolters said.

Donovan argues that a solution might be found through a combination of
exiling the M23’s senior leadership and – as Wolters suggests –
strategically reintegrating the footsoldiers.

“If the core M23 leadership can be exiled and marginalised, the M23 rank
and file may be reintegrated and dispersed in separate groups outside of
North Kivu, avoiding large concentrations of Tutsi soldiers with M23
loyalties,” Donovan said.


*Stewart McCartney is an IWPR contributor in The Hague. *
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