GRAVE HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES BY ALL SIDES
MAR DR CONGO'S TRANSITION FROM WAR, UN REPORTS
March 7, 2007 – (UN News Centre) Summary
executions, enforced disappearances, mass arbitrary arrests, ill-treatment
and torture of civilians for their political affiliations as well
as rape continued at an alarming rate in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo (DRC) in a climate of total impunity in the second
half of 2006, according to the latest United Nations report on
the issue.
All sides, from the armed forces (FARDC), National
Intelligence Agency (ANR), Republican Guard (RG) and Congolese
National Police (PNC) to the protection division of defeated presidential
candidate Jean-Pierre Bemba and Rwandan Hutus, came in for censure
even as the vast country marked a major landmark in its emergence
from years of civil war and factional fighting with nationwide
elections.
“Radical measures to address the DRC’s
ingrained culture of impunity are urgently needed,” the
Human Rights Division of the UN mission in the DRC (MONUC) warns
in the report, calling on the new Government and Parliament to
curb the abuses and address their root causes as the DRC “enters
an unprecedented and crucial historical period.”
Needed steps include the establishment of a credible
human rights commission and an independent and impartial investigation
of high-ranking FARDC officers suspected of committing serious
violations of human rights and international humanitarian law.
The vetting is essential to make the reform of the FARDC sustainable,
the report notes, calling for “a zero tolerance policy.”
Although cases involving the FARDC decreased
from 53 per cent of all abuses reported to the mission in the
first half of 2006 to 40 per cent “the FARDC continued to
be responsible for an alarming number of human rights violations,
including mass killings of civilians, especially in [the eastern]
Ituri District,” it says.
“The use of physical violence against civilians,
including summary executions, beatings and rape, committed by
soldiers of integrated and non-integrated brigades of the FARDC,
continued to be widespread,” says the report, referring
to units that have taken in former rebels.
Meanwhile, the number of abuses committed by
the PNC increased in the second half of 2006 by 15 per cent. “Throughout
the country, policemen continued to carry out arrests of civilians
in flagrant abuse of their power and subject detainees to cruel,
inhuman and degrading treatment,” it says, adding that police
officers were responsible for three cases of mass rape in Equateur
Province.
In the patchwork of factions, large portions
of South Kivu province continued to be controlled by Hutu groups
who fled neighbouring Rwanda after the Hutu genocide of Tutsis
and moderate Hutus there in 1994 and repeatedly committed serious
abuses in the DRC such as abductions, killings and rape. The presence
of armed groups in areas of Katanga, North Kivu and Ituri also
caused insecurity and led to abuses.
Sexual violence remained widespread throughout
the country with some of the worst reports coming from Equateur
and North Kivu, according to the report. Perpetrators were brought
to justice in only a limited number of cases. The ratio of sexual
violence cases committed by the PNC rose from 7 per cent of all
cases in the first half of the year to 23 per cent.
The mission voices concern at the continued practice
of appointing and promoting suspected human rights violators in
the FARDC. “Not only does this completely undermine the
fight against impunity, but it also perpetuates the cycle of violence
by preserving or enhancing the power of human rights abusers and
creates a feeling of frustration among the population,”
it says.
Despite a handful of trials in the last six months
of 2006, the vast majority of serious human rights violations
were not prosecuted or even investigated.
In provinces with natural resources, such as
diamond-mining areas of the Kasais, the casserite-rich territories
of North Kivu or the gold mines of Katanga, the mission routinely
received allegations of serious abuses implicating mostly the
military and police, such as forced labour, torture, cruel, inhuman
and degrading treatment and arbitrary arrests.
MONUC has overseen the DRC’s transition
from a six-year civil war that cost 4 million lives in fighting
and attendant hunger and disease, widely considered the most lethal
conflict in the world since World War II, to gradual stabilization,
culminating in the first democratic elections in over four decades
last year, the largest and most complex polls the UN has ever
helped to organize.
From:http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=21783&Cr=DRC&Cr1=