UN Great Lakes Envoy Welcomes Impending Talks between DR Congo, M23 Rebels
New York, Jun 8 2013 - Welcoming the possible resumption of peace talks between the Government of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC) and the 23 March Movement (M23), the United Nations Special Envoy for Africa's Great Lake's
region has urged both sides to engage in earnest discussion to resolve all outstanding issues.
Mary Robinson, in a statement issued by her Office last evening, welcomed that the talks "are about to resume soon" in
Kampala, the Ugandan capital after which they are named, under the auspices of the International Conference for the
Great Lakes Region (ICGLR), under the auspices of Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni.
"She urges both sides to engage in earnest in their discussions in order to resolve all outstanding issues in the
negotiations and to move toward the normalization of the situation in the eastern DRC," the statement said.
"The Special Envoy underscored the importance of political efforts to achieve peace and security for the people the
eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo and the region," it added.
Last November the M23 -- made up of former members of the FARDC who mutinied in April 2012 -- occupied Goma in eastern
DRC. Clashes between the Government and rebels displaced more than 130,000 people in and around the city and sent
another 47,000 fleeing to neighbouring South Kivu province. Amidst widespread condemnation and calls for their
withdrawal, the M23 fighters pulled out after 11 days.
In the wake of those events, the Security Council in March authorized the deployment of an intervention brigade within
MONUSCO to carry out targeted offensive operations, with or without the Congolese national army, against armed groups
that threaten peace in eastern DRC. A contingent of Tanzanian soldiers arrived Goma last month as part of the brigade.
Tensions have been heightened in the region recently as the M23 publicly decried the deployment of the intervention
brigade and broke off the so-called Kampala peace talks with the DRC Government.
Just two weeks ago, fighting again broke out in Goma between the FARDC and M23, but the hostilities ebbed somewhat ahead
of an unprecedented visit to the region by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim, along
with Mrs. Robinson.
The three visited the DRC, Rwanda, Uganda and other concerned countries to bolster support for the Peace, Security and
Cooperation Framework for the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Region, or as Mrs. Robinson describes it, a
"framework for hope."
The UN-brokered accord, signed in February by 11 African leaders, aims to end the cycles of conflict and violence in
eastern DRC and to build peace in the wider region. Mrs. Robinson also travelled to the region in late April and early
May to push for implementation of the framework.
On 21 May, she proposed a set of principles for peace, which seek to guide immediate efforts to tackle the crisis in the
region, while maintaining a focus on long-term solutions. They recognize the importance of ending the suffering of the
mostly women and children who have been displaced by the violence, and call for the acceleration of the voluntary return
of all refugees in the region.
They also call for the demobilization of all armed groups active in eastern DRC, and urge all parties to comply with all
their obligations under international law.
For more details go to UN News Centre at http://www.un.org/news
ENDS