05.10.10 CONGOLESE STUDENTS’ ORGANISATIONS AND NGOs IN SOUTH AFRICA on UN Mapping Report

Johannesburg, 5
October, 2010

  1. Congolese student organisations and the Forum of NGOs (FOCAS) in
    South Africa express complete satisfaction on the publication, this 1st of
    October 2010, of the “Report on the Mapping Project concerning the most serious
    Human Rights and international humanitarian law violations committed in the
    territory of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) between March 1993 and June
    2003”. It supports the 220 NGOs which collaborated in the collection of the
    facts conveyed to the investigators and wishes to contribute to the
    implementation of the recommendations.

 

  1. “The Mapping Report provides the most exhaustive description
    to date of the most serious violations of Human Rights and international
    humanitarian law committed in the DRC between 1993 and 2003. By enumerating
    these incidents, province by province and in chronological order, it reveals the
    suffering inflicted on this country by years of instability and conflict. In so
    doing, the Mapping Report aims to honour the memory of the victims of the
    conflict and contribute to reiterating the importance of ensuring that the
    perpetrators of the Human Rights violations committed in the past are brought to
    book”, said the South African Navi Pillay, UN High Commissioner for Human
    Rights, on the publication of the said Report.

 

  1. The Report concerns the DRC. It assesses the international law
    violations that may have been committed, to the extent that the most serious
    crimes committed against a civilian population may not only constitute crimes
    according to Congolese law, but also according to international law. The Report
    notes that the vast majority of the serious incidents described “reveal the
    commission of multiple violations of Human Rights and/or international
    humanitarian law, which could constitute crimes against humanity or war crimes,
    indeed often both at once. In certain cases, it even cites the possibility that
    acts of genocide may have been committed”
    .

 

  1. The Ambassador of the DRC to the United Nations, Mr Christian
    ILEKA ATOKI, speaking on behalf of the country, which offered its cooperation
    throughout the Mapping Project, declared that “this Report is detailed, it is
    credible. We welcome its publication. This Report is heartbreaking. The
    Congolese government and I myself, in my personal capacity, are dismayed at the
    unspeakable horror and extent of the crimes endured by the Congolese people…
    The Congolese victims deserve justice. They deserve to have their voices heard.
    For a long time those voices were stifled. I sincerely hope that this time they
    will be heard, not only by us, their leaders, but also by the international
    community as a whole…”

 

  1. The official declarations were in response to the 220 Congolese
    NGOs, many of which had worked together with the investigating team. On 3
    September, these NGOs had already endorsed the draft report and applauded the
    diligence with which the inquiries had been conducted and the professionalism
    which had guided the methodology of the investigations. In their statement, they
    declared: “The NGOs therefore challenge the government of the DRC and those
    of the countries in the region concerned by the facts cited in the Report, in
    particular Rwanda, Uganda, Angola and Burundi, to seize this opportunity to
    acknowledge the atrocious suffering and injustice inflicted on the vast majority
    of the Congolese people and other victims of the criminal acts and massive Human
    Rights violations detailed in the said Report.”

 

  1. Human Rights Defenders throughout the DRC widely supported the
    Report. “We believe it is important to do justice to the victims who lie
    buried in the many communal graves discovered by the UN investigators in the
    different provinces, including Maniema, South Kivu, North Kivu, Orientale and
    Equateur; those victims seem to have been targeted not for what they may have
    done, but for what they were: people belonging to the Rwandese and Congolese
    Hutu community”
    , said the Lotus Group from Kisangani. For its part, ASADHO,
    based in Kinshasa, declared that the Report corroborated many of its own
    investigations and came as a response to the advocacy that had long been
    conducted with the aim of restoring the moral balance of Congolese society based
    on the noble ideals of justice, equity, peace, fraternity and national
    solidarity.

 

7. Congolese students and
NGOs based in South Africa urge the UN and the DRC government to implement the
highly professional report’s recommendations in manner to bring to court any
individual involved in crimes described in the report and restore total peace
climate in the Great Lake region.

 

  1. The war in the
    DRC had left more than 6 million dead; more than 300,000 cases of rape, ie more
    than 55% of the cases registered in the whole world
    [1] and severely pillaged natural
    resources and state property; immense material and environmental
    damage.
  2. In 1996,
    Rwanda, Uganda and Burundi invaded the DRC under the banner of the Alliance of
    Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo (AFDL – Alliance des Forces
    Démocratiques pour la Libération du Congo
    ) ; in 1998, Rwanda, Uganda and
    Burundi attacked the DRC under the banner of the Congolese Rally for Democracy
    (RCD – Rassemblement Congolais pour la Démocratie); since 2003, Rwanda is
    present in the DRC under the name of the National Council for the Defence of the
    People (CNDP – Conseil National pour la Défense du
    Peuple
    ).

 

 

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