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06/01/2005
Contacts: Sarah Martin and Andrea Lari
ri@refugeesinternational.org or 202.828.0110
In the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), a Rwandan
militia group, the FDLR (Forces Démocratiques de
Libération du Rwanda), may finally be ready to lay down their
arms and return in peace to Rwanda. But as the return process begins to
be negotiated and organized, MONUC, the UN peacekeeping mission in the
DRC, the government of Rwanda and other implementing agencies are not
paying adequate attention to the needs of FDLR dependents, leaving at
least 40,000 women and children potentially vulnerable.
Tens of thousands of Rwandans have been living in the eastern DRC since
the 1994 genocide in Rwanda – some as refugees and some as members of
the FDLR. As conflict has swirled through the eastern DRC, militias and
fighting forces have forcibly abducted Congolese women to serve as
their “wives”. The UN women’s agency, UNIFEM, has stressed the
importance of gathering information on this group and considering their
needs in the planning of the demobilization and reintegration process.
However, MONUC has made no plans to gather further information on the
situation of the dependent women of the FDLR and have not planned any
special efforts to sensitize these women to their rights in the
repatriation process. A Kinshasa-based official involved in the
demobilization program insisted to Refugees International, “They have
been in the Congo for eleven years already! It’s not like they haven’t
had time to think [repatriation to Rwanda] over.”
Currently, MONUC is running a general sensitization campaign through
Radio Okapi [the public information station jointly run by MONUC and
Fondation Hirdondelle] and also employing local personnel who try to
reach the FDLR and their dependents in the forest. While Rwandan
women that RI interviewed in the transit sites did acknowledge the role
of Radio Okapi in alerting them to the return process, the radio
campaign does not seem to provide crucial information for the
dependents. For example, the women seemed uninformed about any benefits
packages, taking the opportunity of their interview with RI to question
officials about them. “Will I be able to find tools to farm with when I
return?” asked Marie, a mother of five returning to Rwanda for the
first time in ten years. Refugees International fears that standards of
informed consent are not being met for the dependents of FDLR
combatants.
The eastern DRC has seen extremely high levels of sexual violence
targeted towards women. This fact, combined with the knowledge that
some of the dependents of the FDLR combatants may have been abducted
against their will and forced to become “wives” of combatants,
obligates MONUC to take every precaution to ensure that they are
respecting the rights of Rwandan and Congolese women involved in the
movement of FDLR combatants to Rwanda. Women need the opportunity and
the time, in a private space, to learn what the repatriation will
involve, express their concerns about the process, and make an informed
decision as to whether they want to return with the FDLR combatants,
return independently, or remain in the Congo. Officials responsible for
the demobilization program told RI that they assume that women are not
being coerced to return with the combatants, but they appear to have
little basis on which to make this assumption. “We were never supposed
to be in the business of providing anything other than a bus ride over
the border to Rwanda,” said a MONUC official. There have already been
reports of Congolese women returning to the DRC after being taken to
Rwanda by FDLR combatants. While no one has reported that these
women were forcibly taken to Rwanda, it remains an area of concern.
As the news of the FDLR repatriation reaches the Rwandans living in the
forest in North and South Kivu in the DRC, Rwandan refugees have begun
to present themselves at sites run by the Office of the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in order to be repatriated. UNHCR
reports that they have repatriated 3,700 Rwandans since the beginning
of 2005 and that the number of returning Rwandan refugees has doubled
every month. The increase in refugees returning home suggests that the
number of FDLR and their dependents who are willing to return may be
quite high. Current estimates run between 10,000 - 15,000 combatants
and 40,000 -60,000 dependents. “We’ve been repatriating FDLR combatants
and dependents since 2000. Now we handle approximately 50 a week and
with the existing capacity we can process 100 a day per each of the six
centers,” said one official working on the demobilization program.
However, another MONUC official confided, “With greater numbers, I
would be very surprised if we can channel the participants through that
quickly.” The needs of dependents may be ignored in the latter
scenario. The FDLR themselves have been reluctant to fully engage in
the demobilization process, not providing numbers of combatants nor a
timeline for demobilization.
The humanitarian agencies involved in the demobilization and
reintegration program in Rwanda currently have limited capacity to
provide protection to children, including both dependents and former
child soldiers. UNHCR Rwanda, which is currently attempting to handle
an influx of Congolese refugees and the increasing numbers of
repatriating Rwandan refugees, processes the dependents of the FDLR at
the same transit site, Nkamira, near Gisenyi, Rwanda. While the
dependents only stay in the transit site for 24 hours, UNHCR is already
struggling to accommodate the Congolese refugees in the camp. In
addition, recent breaks in the food pipeline may jeopardize any
assistance that repatriating dependents may receive. (See the RI
bulletin, World
Food Program Hampered by Break in Pipeline.)
While the willingness of the Government of Rwanda to accept all the
dependents of the militia, be they Rwandan or Congolese, is admirable,
the Government has not been clear what protection or assistance is
available for women and dependents after they have been received in
Rwanda. Of particular concern is what will be planned for the
combatants and their dependents once they reach their home community.
The World Bank has said that it will consider extending their funding
to include support for dependents. Currently, it is aimed exclusively
at ex-combatants. It is urgent that support mechanisms for the
dependents be put in place immediately as there have already been
reports of Congolese women returning from Rwanda after rejection in
Rwandan communities. A humanitarian worker told RI, “It is possible
that women will not be accepted by the family once they are taken into
Rwanda. We hope it will be sorted out at the local authority level or
by their husbands.” Without conscious attention to this issue in the
planning process, Congolese women will certainly be ignored once they
have been left in the communities.
Many agencies in North Kivu pointed out that women who were abandoned
by their husbands or who refuse to go to Rwanda do not benefit from the
demobilization and reintegration program at all. The government of the
DRC along with international agencies must organize a response to their
needs for protection and assistance.
Therefore Refugees International
recommends that:
Rwanda: Congolese Refugees Need More Protection and Assistance
Rwandan Refugees in Burundi: Intimidation and Violence Unacceptable
Rwanda: World Food Program hampered by break in pipeline
16 Days of Action Against Gender-Based Violence: DDRR
Refugee Voices: Child Soldiers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Visual Mission: Insecurity Hampers Access in Eastern Congo
Democratic Republic of Congo: RI to Assess Displacement
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