Posted by Williammalecela.com on Thursday, August 29, 2013
M23 waua meja wa Jeshi la Wananchi Tanzania
KINSHASA,
Congo (AP) — United Nations forces and the Congolese army attacked
rebel positions with helicopter gunships, armored personnel carriers and
a phalanx of ground troops Wednesday, ramping up the U.N.'s engagement
in the latest rebellion to roil this country's tormented east.
The fighting was some of the fiercest in the week since the newly
created U.N. intervention brigade went on the offensive, and one
Tanzanian peacekeeper was killed after the rebels aimed artillery fire
at their position, the U.N. said in a statement. Seven other troops were
also wounded, U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq said.
"I am outraged by today's killing of a United Nations peacekeeper from
Tanzania by the M23," said Martin Kobler, the special representative of
the secretary-general in Congo, who heads the peacekeeping mission. "He
sacrificed his life to protect civilians in Goma."
The fighting is taking place nine miles (15 kilometers) from the
provincial capital of Goma, a city home to nearly 1 million people that
was briefly captured by the M23 rebels late last year.
The U.N. involvement in the latest flare-up of violence is in sharp
contrast to November, when the U.N. peacekeeping mission, known as
MONUSCO, stood by as the rebels overtook Goma because their mandate was
only to protect civilians.
The stepped-up U.N. intervention brigade, created by the Security
Council in March, is authorized to take the offensive against the
rebels.
"It's already changing the equation. For now, I would shy away from
calling it a game changer. It's certainly unprecedented not only for
Congo, but for peacekeeping itself and the U.N. at large," said Timo
Mueller, a Goma-based researcher with the Enough Project, an advocacy
group active in eastern Congo.
Martin Nesirky, spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, said
in a statement that Ban condemned the killing of the Tanzanian and
violence against U.N. peacekeepers generally.
"The Secretary-General deplores in the strongest terms the killing and
wounding of UN peacekeepers," the statement reads. Even as forces
pounded the rebels, U.N. officials continued to send mixed messages
about the extent of their involvement, repeatedly saying they were
merely "backing" or "supporting" the Congolese military, rather than
leading the offensive themselves.
"The main engagement is by the (Congolese) forces," said Siphiwe
Dlamini, a spokesman for the South African military, which contributed
troops to the brigade. "We are retaliating and going on the offensive."
Lt. Col. Felix Basse, the military spokesman for the U.N. peacekeeping
mission, also emphasized that U.N. forces were fighting alongside the
Congolese army.
However, the president of the M23 rebel movement, Bertrand Bisimwa, who
spoke by telephone, said the U.N.'s intervention brigade was on the
frontline of Wednesday's fighting.
"It was the U.N. that was shooting directly at us, from their
helicopters. It's the Tanzanian and South African (United Nations)
troops that are on the frontline. It's them that we see first," he said.
As the U.N. mission takes its strongest steps yet to protect Congolese
civilians, observers note the intervention brigade faces high
expectations. It is already facing backlash from residents who say their
heightened efforts still aren't enough to protect civilians from an
onslaught of mortar fire.
Last weekend, scores of Goma residents took to the streets in anger
after a barrage of mortar shells rained down on residential
neighborhoods and killed several civilians. A U.N. car was set ablaze,
and in the melee two protesters were killed.
"Given this outburst of frustration during these demonstrations, MONUSCO
might feel pressured to take on M23 and be sucked into an active
conflict, into active warfare," Mueller said. "There might be a momentum
building up where MONUSCO has to prove its legitimacy and its
effectiveness and has to show the population that it's actually doing
something."
In a recent open letter, the charity Medecins Sans Frontieres, or
Doctors Without Borders, also expressed concern about the mission's
simultaneous mandate to "aid, protect and fight" in Congo. The U.N.
vigorously defended its mandate, saying it could not "fold our arms and
allow armed groups to kill the population."
In addition to seven U.N. troops wounded Wednesday, three others already
have sustained injuries since the U.N. brigade began directly engaging
rebels last week. One South African and two Tanzanians were hit by
shrapnel Saturday, South Africa's military said in a statement
Wednesday.
Angelo Izama, a Uganda-based analyst who runs a regional security think
tank called Fanaka Kwawote, cautions though that failure to unseat the
M23 from their current strongholds overlooking Goma would be a
psychological blow to the Congolese military and its U.N. allies.
He said it was highly unlikely that the U.N. brigade would sustain the
offensive if more and more of its troops were killed or wounded in
combat.
"If they come under sustained attack, the U.N. will have no appetite for war," he said. "They will call time out."
Sources : Congo Fighting Intensifies - AOL On
UN peacekeeper killed in eastern Congo fighting
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