DRC President Tshisekedi On Tenterhooks, Declares State Of Emergency In Two Provinces After Horrifying Massacre

DRC President Tshisekedi On Tenterhooks, Declares State Of Emergency In Two Provinces After Horrifying Massacre

 

By Spy Uganda Correspondent 

 

DRC: Dozens of armed groups have operated for years in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s (DRC) North Kivu and Ituri provinces, and civilians have been subjected to horrifying massacres. Armed militias and inter-communal violence have killed more than 300 people so far in 2021.

Presidential spokesman Tharsice Kasongo Mwema said on Tuesday that the two provinces would be declared under siege for 30 days starting on Thursday, May 6.

“To respond to the situation during the state of siege, the provincial governments of Ituri and North Kivu … will be replaced by offices of the armed forces of the DRC or the national police,” he said.

It was the first time since the Democratic Republic of Congo’s independence that a president used the exceptional “state of siege” or state of emergency.

President Felix Tshisekedi said he wanted to eliminate insecurity in the two provinces, where the Congolese government has failed to enforce the rule of law.

“There is a security vacuum, a judicial vacuum, and economies that are out of the central state’s control,” said Pierre Boisselet from Kivu Security Tracker, an organization dedicated to mapping out conflict in the DRC.

The military and police will take over positions from civilian authorities for a month, starting this week.

Their goal is to break a cycle of violence where armed groups in the area prey on civilians by taxing and abusing them, while benefiting from illegal economic activities.

The move to put military and police officers in jobs usually performed by civilians has faced criticism, because the Congolese army has often been seen as part of the conflict.

“They’ve sometimes provided arms and other support to rebel movements. The local population often sees the national army and the national police as one of the reasons why the conflict has continued to escalate rather than as a solution,” according to Phil Clark of London University’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS).

Evariste Iragi, a Congolese legal researcher, said the state of emergency is allowed under the Constitution to fight a threat that could prevent institutions proper functioning properly.

DRC President Felix Tshisekedi’s ‘state of siege’ has been met with criticism, yet the move is a double-edged sword.

“It is an exceptional period which restricts citizens’ rights and liberty, such as free movement, expression, right to demonstrate,” he told the press

“A move like this can have serious consequences on the daily life of the population.”

Legally, the Congolese Constitution recognizes the move but ordering military and police officers to take over civil authorities will not bring peace says the Goma-based civil society movement, Lucha (Lutte pour le Changement).

‘Lucha’ or Fight for Change, is a Congolese civil organization based in Goma

The group instead wants the army strengthened, and local engagement to develop strategies that meet the expectations of the population.

“But strengthening the army does not mean declaring a “state of siege.” It means providing the necessary logistical means,” said Ghislain Muhiwa, a Lucha activist.

“We also propose a dialogue between the government, civilians and MONUSCO (the UN mission in the Eastern DRC). From this dialogue, we will unearth the real problems, and it is from this that we will decide whether it is worth declaring a ‘state of siege’ or not.”

But rebuilding state control is very difficult, which is why the conflict has gone on for over two decades, according to Boisselet.

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