BSS
  19 Dec 2023, 13:44

UN prepares to start pulling peacekeepers from DR Congo

UNITED NATIONS, United States, Dec 19, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - The UN Security

Council is expected on Tuesday to accede to a demand from the Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC) and launch a gradual withdrawal of peacekeepers,
starting later this month.

The drawdown would come despite United Nations concern about violence in the
eastern part of the country.

Ravaged by conflict, the vast and impoverished DR Congo will host high-risk
presidential and parliamentary elections on Wednesday, a vote that coincides
with the expiry of the annual mandate of the UN peacekeeping mission, known
as Monusco.

Despite a volatile domestic situation, the Congolese government has for
months been calling for an "accelerated" withdrawal of UN peacekeepers, from
the end of 2023 rather than the end of 2024. It considers the UN force to be
ineffective in protecting civilians from the armed groups and militias that
have plagued the eastern DRC for three decades.

The accusation is similar to that made by other African countries, notably
Mali, which has demanded the emergency departure of the UN Minusma mission.

In recent months, several Council members, notably the United States, have
expressed doubts as to whether Congolese forces are ready to replace Monusco
to ensure the security of the population.

However, as UN missions cannot operate without the authorization of host
countries, the DRC wants to force the Security Council's hand -- though its
messaging has been less forceful than Mali's.

Even as it complies with the DR Congo's demands, the Council is expected to
underline its "concern over the escalation of violence" in the east and
"tensions between Rwanda and the DRC," according to a draft text seen by AFP.

If the draft resolution is adopted as expected on Tuesday, the Council will
decide to "initiate the gradual, responsible and sustainable withdrawal" of
the mission, in line with a withdrawal plan agreed in November between
Kinshasa and Monusco.

The first phase includes the withdrawal of peacekeepers from South Kivu
province by the end of April 2024, beginning "before the end of 2023."

- Reduced presence -

From May 2024, Monusco will be present only in North Kivu and Ituri. And from
July 1, its strength will be reduced by some 2,350 personnel (from a maximum
authorized strength of around 13,800 military and police personnel).

Further withdrawal will be determined on the basis of an evaluation report on
the first phase, which the Council expects by the end of June 2024.

A UN peacekeeping force has been present in the country since 1999. For
several years, the Security Council has been cautiously disengaging, setting
broad parameters for the transfer of responsibilities to Congolese forces,
with an aim to begin withdrawing by 2024.

While the head of Monusco, Bintou Keita, recently expressed concern about an
increased risk of "direct military confrontation" between the DRC and Rwanda,
the draft resolution also calls for "calm and dialogue" between the two
neighbors.

Without naming anyone, it also condemns "support by any external party" for
the armed groups of the M23 (March 23 Movement) and the FDLR (Democratic
Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda), and calls for the withdrawal of these
external parties from Congolese territory.

In their last report, published in June, experts mandated by the Security
Council claimed to have "new evidence of direct intervention by Rwandan
defense forces" in the DRC, notably in support of the M23 and FDLR.