US urges Rwanda to end support for DR Congo rebels
             © AFP          
                   Rwanda must "immediately end any support" for M23 rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the United States said Tuesday, after a report from Human Rights Watch blamed the rebels for numerous rapes and summary executions.
           By News Wires  (text)          
                 The United States Tuesday toughened its tone against Rwanda,  demanding it withdraw troops from the eastern Democratic Republic of  Congo and end support to M23 rebels accused of atrocities there.
 In its strongest comments to date against Rwandan leaders, Washington  said there was "a credible body of evidence" linking top Rwandan  officials to the rebels who have brought months of terror to the central  African country.
 "We call upon Rwanda to immediately end any support to the M23,  withdraw military personnel from eastern DRC and follow through on its  commitments," State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters.
 Her comments came after a damning report by Human Rights Watch and  ahead of a UN Security Council meeting on the Great Lakes meeting to be  chaired in New York on Thursday by US Secretary of State John Kerry.
 The HRW report found M23 rebels have summarily executed some 44  people and raped 61 women and girls since March 2013 in eastern DR  Congo.
 Residents had reported regular movements of men dressed in Rwandan  army uniforms into Congo, while food, ammunition and other supplies were  coming from Rwanda to the M23.
 "Not only is Rwanda allowing its territory to be used by the abusive  M23 to get recruits and equipment, but the Rwandan military is still  directly supporting the M23," said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at  Human Rights Watch.
 "This support is sustaining an armed group responsible for numerous killings, rapes and other serious abuses."
 The M23 are Tutsi fighters formerly of the Rwanda-backed rebel group National Congress for the Defense of the People, or CNDP.
 They were integrated into DR Congo's regular army in 2009 as part of a  peace deal following their failed 2008 offensive on the eastern city of  Goma.
 Rwanda has long denied any complicity in the violence, with Rwandan  President Paul Kagame -- a US ally -- last year dismissing the  allegations made by the UN and various human rights groups as  "ridiculous."
 Psaki said: "We believe there is a credible body of evidence that  supports the key findings of the Human Rights Watch report, including  support by senior Rwandan officials to the M23 and of Rwandan military  personnel in the DRC."
 She refused to say whether there had been any direct contact between  the US administration and Kigali following the release of the HRW report  on Monday, but she said the State Department's views were shared by the  White House.
 Last year the US froze $200,000 of military aid to Kigali amid  concerns over support for M23 rebels but did not go as far as accusing  the Rwandan military and officials of specific involvement.
 Fresh fighting raged in the DR Congo's restive east for several hours  Monday as army helicopters attacked positions of the M23 rebels, who  fired mortars in return, both sides said.
 The latest clashes in the central African country's mineral-rich but  conflict-torn east broke four days of relative calm, further damaging a  tattered truce that had lasted from late May, when UN chief Ban Ki-moon  visited the region, until July 14.
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REUTERS – nytimes.com, July 23, 2013
« It was the first response by Washington to recent clashes between M23 and Congolese government forces near Goma, the largest city in the mineral-rich east, but it stopped short of directly implicating the Rwandan president, Paul Kagame, a United States ally.
"We call upon Rwanda to immediately end any support for the M23," said Jen Psaki, a State Department spokeswoman. She also called on Rwanda to "withdraw military personnel" from eastern Congo.
The call came two days before Secretary of State John Kerry is to lead a special session of the United Nations Security Council on Africa's Great Lakes region.
A United Nations report in June said the M23 recruited fighters in Rwanda with the aid of sympathetic Rwandan army officers, while elements of the Congolese Army have cooperated with the Rwandan Hutu rebel group F.D.L.R. The report prompted the United States and European states to suspend military assistance to Rwanda.
Ms. Psaki said the latest concerns over M23 followed credible evidence from Human Rights Watch that said the rebels were to blame for executions, rapes and forcible recruitment of men and boys while receiving support from Rwanda.
Rwanda rejected the rights group's allegations, saying that its report was undermined by its inclusion of incorrect testimony. Rwanda also accused Human Rights Watch of paying for witness testimony, a charge the group denied.
The rights group acknowledged erroneous testimony in the report but said Tuesday that it stood by the report's broader conclusions. A statement by the group said the report contained an error about where Rwandan peacekeepers had served. »
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/24/world/africa/us-says-rwanda-aids-congo-rebels.html?_r=0
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