RWANDA: Rwanda In Trouble
A group of Rwandan rebels are likely to cause Democratic Republic of Congo into yet another armed conflict, the DRC’s United Nations ambassador has told the UN Security Council.
Ignace Gata Mavita wa Lufuta told a Council session reviewing the status of the Great Lakes region that P5, a coalition of Rwandan opposition groups led by exiled general Kayumba Nyamwasa, receives weapons and ammunition from a neighbouring country.
While the envoy did not name the country in question, he called attention to a recent report by a UN Panel of Experts that cites Burundi as the source of those supplies.
Such shipments would violate a UN arms embargo that applies to all groups in the DRC except government forces and the UN’s peacekeeping force – Monusco.
The panel attributes the Burundi-P5 weapons connection to several former P5 combatants whom it interviewed.
Tanzania and South Africa, as well as Burundi, are also sources of recruits for P5, the ex-combatants told UN experts.
The panel asked for clarification from the Burundi government on these matters but received no reply to its request, the report states.
But the P5 has never staged attacks on Rwandan territory, the former fighters told the UN group, instead they attacked what they thought were Burundian rebel groups active within the Congolese territory.
The eastern DRC, the region where P5 operates, is already the scene of multiple armed conflicts involving scores of militias.
Said Djinnit, UN Special envoy for the Great Lakes Region, described these armed units as negative forces in his presentation to the Security Council, saying their presence in eastern DRC perpetuates insecurity and mistrust between some countries.
But he gave a generally upbeat assessment of the peace and security situation in the Great Lakes region in what served as a farewell address.
Mr Djinnit, an Algerian diplomat, is stepping down this month after more than four years in the Great Lakes posting.
Noting important steps towards durable peace and stability during the past two decades, he said the Great Lakes region is now largely peaceful.
Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa born 1962 is a Rwandan former Lieutenant general who formerly was the Chief of Staff of the Rwandan Army from 1998 to 2002.
He was also head of Rwandan intelligence from 1998 to 2002 and served as Rwanda's ambassador to India between 2004 and 2010. He survived an assassination attempt in 2010. Nyamwasa has been an opposition leader in exile since as part of the Rwanda National Congress.
A Tutsi born in Rwanda, Nyamwasa grew up in refugee camps in Uganda and earned a law degree in Makerere University.
He later joined Yoweri Museveni's National Resistance Army in January 1986 and served as a Ugandan military officer before 1990.
With Paul Kagame, he contributed to the creation of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) in the late 1980s and was considered a central figure in the military during the RPF campaign and the post genocidal period, when he oversaw anti-insurgency campaigns in the country's north-west.
A 2006 French inquiry with the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda accused Nyamwasa, Kagame and four other officials of organizing the shooting down the plane of then Rwandan president Juvenal Habyarimana.
The event is cited as the catalyst for the Rwandan genocide. Nyamwasa has also been accused by Spain of ordering the killing of three Spanish NGO workers and a Canadian priest.
The group allegedly were targeted because they had evidence of the RPF killing Hutu civilians.
Nyamwasa may have been falling out with Kagame as early as 1998. Historian Gerard Prunier states that he and others may have been envious of the foreign aide money being siphoned off by Kagame and friends around this time.
An RPF invasion of eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo was seen as a way for all to get a share of the spoils.
Nyamwasa was made Rwandan ambassador to India in 2004, possibly in an attempt by Kagame to keep a political rival far away from the country.
When he returned to Rwanda to bury his mother, he was summoned by military officials who are alleged to demand he write Kagame an apology for a list of perceived infractions.
In response, Nywamwasa fled to South Africa on 28 February 2010 and sought exile there.
In South Africa, Nyamwasa partnered with former RPF official Gerald Gahima and Theogene Rudasingwa to create the opposition Rwanda National Congress.
The RNC has joined with a coalition of Tutsi and Hutu who oppose President Kagame.
The Rwandan government later stated that he may have been working with Colonel Patrick Karegeya, another former intelligence head who was living in exile in South Africa.
Karegeya was found murdered in a Johannesburg hotel on December 31, 2013. The RNC accuse agents of President Kagame of carrying out the assassination.
There have been 3 assassination attempts on Kayumba Nyamwasa in South Africa.
In June 2010, Brigadier General Jean Bosco Kazura, head of the Rwandese Association Football Federation, traveled to South Africa to see the World Cup and allegedly contacted Nyamwasa.
Kazura was recalled and placed under arrest, although an army spokesman said this was purely because he had failed to obtain permission to travel.
Nyamwasa was shot in the stomach in Johannesburg, South Africa on 19 June 2010.
Several people arrested after the shooting were found to be Rwandan. Kayumba was recorded to have said that Kagame wants him dead because he challenges his dictatorial views.
Nyamwasa's wife stated that the attack was politically motivated.
Al-Jazeera reported that Rosette said they were in the parking lot of their home and a man came to the side of the car with a pistol and shot at her husband who managed to get out of the car and then there was a scuffle. The driver of the car then chased the assailant away.
Four men were convicted for the attempt on Nyamwasa's life. Rwandan businessman Pascal Kanyandekwe was accused by a South African magistrate of masterminding the plot, but was not brought to trial.
Kanyandekwe was said to have tried to bribe a police officer with $1 million to let him off.
The day after the assassination attempt, President Kagame told a rally that whoever betrays the country will pay the price, I assure you whoever it is, it is a matter of time Kagame said.
Jean-Leonard Rugambage, a Rwandan journalist who investigated the attempt on Nyamwasa's life, was murdered a few days later in Kigali.
Nyamwasa is accused by Rwandan authorities of involvement in acts of terrorism, including three grenade attacks in Kigali on 19 February 2010, but was not arrested in South Africa due to a lack of evidence and extradition treaties between the two countries.
In 2011, the Military High Court in Kigali condemned him and other RNC founders for terrorist acts, threat to state security and public order.
He was stripped of his military rank, removed from the army and sentenced to 24 years in prison. All four men were tried in absentia.
A December 2018 report from the United Nations accuses Nyamwasa of traveling back and forth from South Africa and the South Kivu province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo recruiting soldiers to fight Rwanda.
His alleged group, called P5 or Platform Five, is said to be under the umbrella of the opposition group in exile Rwanda National Congress. P5 is alleged to receive financial support from Burundi and Uganda, and additional recruits from South Africa and Tanzania.
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