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| US Great Lakes envoy Russ Feingold |
The US's new representative for Africa's Great Lakes region
has upped the pressure on Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo
(DRC) to end the bloody M23 rebellion in north-east DRC. After years of
close relations between Washington and Rwanda, Russ Feingold is being
welcomed as more "balanced" in his dealings with both governments.
Feingold, who took over as Great Lakes envoy in September, met DRC
President Joseph Kabila on Tuesday before flying to Kigali where he was
expected to meet President Paul Kagame.
Last week the UN stepped up pressure on the DRC government and the
M23 to reach agreement at long-running negotiations in Kampala.
This weekend Feingold was among foreign observers in the Ugandan
capital and, along with Martin Kobler, the head of the UN intervention
force Monusco, stayed until late on Sunday night to push for progress in
the negotiations.
Since the 1994 Rwandan genocide Washington has had close ties to the English-speaking leadership in Kigali.
But the M23 rebellion, when members of a former rebel group who had
been integrated into the DRC army mutinied, complaining that a previous
agreement, signed on 23 March 2009, had not been implemented, opened a
division between the US and Rwanda.
Rights groups, including US-based Human Rights Watch,
have accused the M23 of numerous atrocities against civilians and their
leaders have been accused of exploiting the mineral resources of North
Kivu, a region of DRC that borders on Rwanda.
A UN report accused
the Rwandan army of recruiting for th rebels and giving them logistical
support, alsp claiming that highly placed Rwandans actively supported
the movement.
For the last two years the US has suspended military aid to Kigali over the question.
US Secretary of State John Kerry phoned Kagame last weekend and
Feingold has shuttled back and forth in the region over the last couple
of weeks.
"We have the impression of having someone we can talk to, who
understands our concerns," a member of the DRC delegation to the Kampala
talks told RFI's Sonia Rolley,
while the Rwandans "appreciate" that he is pressing Monusco to combat
other armed groups, including the Rwandan Democratic Liberation Forces,
in the area.
Feingold is also reported to be opposed to an amnesty for M23 leaders
accused of war crimes and the rebels' reintegration into the DRC army,
both positions that Kinshasa defended during the talks.
"Feingold without doubt has the most balanced position possible,
given his aim - end the repeated rebellions and foreign interference in
Congo," a diplomat stationed in the region told RFI.

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