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EU Rules out Congo Troop Deployment Despite Deepening Crisis
The United States also said that it would not send troops to the UN peacekeeping force in the DRC, but backed UN calls for reinforcements to help stop the fighting.
"The peacekeeping office in the UN (United Nations) has put out a call for additional forces," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters. "We're not going to contribute US forces to this, but we support the contribution that others might make, and believe that it's important -- it's important that there be capable forces there as well," he said.
France's Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and his British counterpart David Miliband were preparing to head to strife-torn Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda on Friday.
Kouchner's spokesman, Eric Chevallier, told reporters in Paris that the pair would visit the Congolese capital Kinshasa and the eastern city of Goma, which is besieged by rebel forces. Officials confirmed they would also go to Rwanda.
"The mission will have several goals," Chevallier said. "The first is to carry a clear political message from Europe to demand that the situation stabilizes and the different actors agree to talk to each other more.
"The second is to get an update on the situation of the civilian population. Europe has decided to make an important contribution to the humanitarian effort in Goma.
"Thirdly, we will evaluate the security situation. In this regard, the goal is to study the security dynamic on the ground," he added.
French FM warns of unprecedented African "massacre"
Before leaving for DRC, Kouchner said the eastern region of the country is the scene of a "massacre" on a scale rarely seen in Africa.
"This is a massacre such as Africa has probably never seen, which is taking place virtually before our eyes," Kouchner told Europe 1 radio. "It is out of the question that we let this happen."
Foreign Office spokesman, commenting before Miliband left for Congo said that the EU delegation was "not going to set unrealistic ambitions for the visit but the fact that they are going illustrates the level of concern."
The EU delegation "will impress upon the leaders of both countries the seriousness of the situation in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (and) the need to engage urgently to find a solution to the underlying problem," he added.
Germany calls on Rwanda to help end violence
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier called on Rwanda to use its influence to halt the spiraling conflict.
"Rwanda clearly has influence (over the situation in eastern Congo) which it can use in a positive way," government spokesman Jens Ploetner told reporters on behalf of the foreign minister's office. "I would even say that Rwanda is crucial to bringing peace to DRC."
Ploetner added that Steinmeier and Kagame both backed the implementation of a lasting ceasefire.
"They also agreed on the fact that it is crucial that the large number of refugees receive humanitarian assistance," he said.
Steinmeier had also held talks with his British and French counterparts over the dire situation in the DRC as EU leaders discussed a humanitarian mission and an emergency visit to the region to press for a resolution of the conflict.
Ploetner said Steinmeier had called for a political solution to improve the humanitarian situation as quickly as possible while French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner had renewed his proposal to dispatch European troops.
No military mission
France, which holds the rotating EU presidency, has proposed sending up to 1,500 European troops on a humanitarian mission to Goma but Britain and Germany have voiced serious reservations.
As international efforts intensified to prevent further an escalation of the violence, Kouchner and British Foreign Minister David Miliband announced a joint visit to Congo on Friday and then on to Rwanda.
While calling for an increase in troops, Kouchner and EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana agreed the priority should be placed on providing aid, not fighting rebels. Kouchner added that while military personnel would likely make up the force, its mission would be to help refugees.
"This response in our point of view should be humanitarian ... the name of these tactical groups -- battlegroups -- should not lead you to imagine that we are going to send troops to fight alongside the MONUC," he said, referring to the 17,000-strong U.N. peacekeeping force already in Congo.
Kouchner said the EU force would only be a small element of a larger, political solution between warring parties in Congo and neighboring states.
Germany questions expanding EU deployment
Underlining Germany's resistance to the proposal, Ploetner noted that a 17,000-strong UN mission, MONUC, was already on the ground and said a deployment of EU troops could have "consequences for the credibility of MONUC in the long run."
"Those who hastily say that the existing mission is insufficient must expect that that will have consequences once MONUC is back to carrying out its mission alone," he said.
German Development Minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul reinforced German doubts by also questioning the logic behind increasing the EU presence in l EU contingent is required to help restore peace in the DRC, whether German troops should be part of such a mission, or whether a larger MONUC force will do," she said Thursday. "But violence has to stop as soon as possible. The international community cannot afford to sit back and simply watch once again."
The eastern Congolese city of Goma has become the epicenter of a humanitarian tragedy after tens of thousands of people fled an offensive by rebels of the National Congress for the Defense of the People that routed government forces in Nord-Kivu province.
Only 850 MONUC peacekeepers -- mainly Indian -- stand between Goma and the rebel troops led by Laurent Nkunda after government soldiers fled the city on Wednesday.
EU-brokered ceasefire in tatters
Though the European Union brokered a peace treaty in January that was signed by dozens of militias, including the rebel group responsible for the 1994 genocide in neighboring Rwanda, the country has slid back into conflict.
Fighting in recent days has led to a stand-off between rebels and the UN, as the latter rushes to aid nearly 30,000 displaced persons in what UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is calling a humanitarian crisis of "catastrophic dimensions."
A ceasefire came into effect on Wednesday, calming attacks, but the latest round of violence had already provoked a crisis for aid agencies, some of whom have moved operations across the border to Rwanda.
EU frees up funding for aid
Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: The UN already has a peacekeeping force in the country
The European Commission responded to reports of the aid crisis Thursday by saying it would give 4 million euros ($5.2 million) in emergency assistance to help the Democratic Republic of Congo to cope with the conflict in its troubled east.
"We are facing a critical humanitarian situation," spokesman John Clancy told journalists in Brussels. "The commission can announce emergency financial aid of a total 4 million euros."
He said 12 million of the 514 million euros earmarked for the country under the European Commission's 2008-2013 spending plans would specifically go towards helping the population of the war-torn east.
Germany has reportedly contributed 67.5 million euros to MONUC in 2008 and just increased its humanitarian aid for DRC to 5.7 million euros.
The move comes as EU Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Louis Michel was wrapping up a two-day trip to Congo on Thursday in order to determine the country's needs in the wake of the recent unrest




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 10:41 on October 31st, 2008
pankaj kumar, thanks for keeping this never-ending war in sight.