WHEN, IN 2006, Joseph Kabila became the first
democratically elected president of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, many Congolese and international
observers hoped that stability had finally come to the
country. During the previous decade, Congo had been
ravaged by widespread violence, including the world's
deadliest conflict since World War II--a conflict that
involved three Congolese rebel movements, 14 foreign
armed groups, and countless militias; killed over 3.3
million Congolese; and destabilized most of central
Africa. In 2001, the United Nations dispatched to the
country what was to become its largest and most
expensive peacekeeping mission. A peace settlement was
reached in 2003, paving the way for the 2006 elections.
The entire effort was touted as an example of a
successful international intervention in a collapsing
state.
Yet over two million more Congolese have died since the
official end of the war. According to the International
Rescue Committee, over a thousand civilians continue to
die in Congo every day, mostly due to malnutrition and
diseases that could be easily prevented if Congo's
already weak economic and social structures had not
collapsed during the conflict. In mid-2007, in the
eastern province of Nord-Kivu, low-level fighting
between government forces and troops of the renegade
Tutsi general Laurent Nkunda escalated into a major
confrontation, both playing off and exacerbating
long-standing animosity between the Tutsis, the Hutus,
and other groups. Since then, clashes have killed
hundreds, maybe thousands, of fighters and civilians and
forced half a million people to relocate. Congo is now
the stage for the largest humanitarian disaster in the
world--far larger than the crisis in Sudan.
The international community has admittedly been facing a
very complex situation: all the parties have legitimate
grievances, but all are also responsible for massive
human rights violations; the fighting involves many
armed groups, and these often fragment and shift
alliances. Still, the main reason that the
peace-building strategy in Congo has failed is that the
international community has paid too little attention to
the root causes of the violence there: local disputes
over land and power. If anything, international efforts
to bring peace have enhanced local tensions. While it
focused on organizing the presidential, legislative, and
provincial elections of 2006, the international
community overlooked other critical postconflict tasks,
such as local peace building and overhauling the justice
system. Meanwhile, the electoral process fueled ethnic
hatred and marginalized ethnic minorities, making the
reemergence of armed movements all the more likely.
The international community must fundamentally revise
its strategy. It must focus on local antagonisms,
because they often cause or fuel broader tensions, and
regional and national actors hijack local agendas to
serve their own ends. Until the local grievances that
are feeding the violence throughout eastern Congo are
addressed, security in the entire country and the Great
Lakes region overall will remain uncertain.
YOUR LAND IS MY LAND
TENSIONS AT the levels of the individual, the family,
the clan, the village, and the district are a critical
source of instability and violence in Congo. Control
over land, especially, has historically been a major
bone of contention in rural areas because the stakes are
high and the interested parties numerous. Land matters
because for many people it is the key to survival and
feeding one's family. For many more, it is both a
primary method of gaining the social capital needed to
integrate local structures and a means of securing
natural resources.
In the territories of Masisi and Walikale, in Nord-Kivu,
different ethnic groups, clans, and families are
fighting over competing claims. There are centuries-old
antagonisms among native Congolese communities, such as
the Hundes, the Nandes, and the Nyangas. But the
fiercest disputes oppose them to Congolese of Rwandan
descent. In the early part of the twentieth century,
Belgian colonial administrators relocated over 85,000
people, both Hutu and Tutsi, from overpopulated Rwanda
to the sparse Kivu provinces in Congo, and in the 1960s
and 1970s various waves of Tutsis fled there to escape
pogroms in Rwanda. Today, Congolese of Rwandan descent,
especially the Tutsis among them, own most of the land,
but the Hundes and the Nyangas continue to claim it as
their own on the grounds that it was never rightfully
sold or given away.
These competing claims have gotten far more complicated
since the 1990s, as the 1994 genocide in Rwanda and
various wars, invasions, and refugee movements caused
multiple shifts in the ownership or control of land in
the Kivus. Many Tutsis in the region, in particular,
whether Congolese or Rwandan, have fled prosecution
several times over the past decade, abandoning their
plots or selling them at a discount and then claiming
them back again, sometimes by force, on their return.
The provincial authorities have resolved some of these
disputes since the peace deal in 2003, but land
ownership is at the core of the current fighting in
Nord-Kivu. Throughout eastern Congo, historical
grievances of this kind also fuel battles between (and
within) dozens of mini factions from different tribes,
clans, and families--such as the Hemas and the Lendus in
Ituri, in the eastern part of the province of Orientale,
and the Bembes, the Holoholos, and the Kalangas in
northern Katanga--and greatly impede the peaceful return
of refugees and displaced persons.
Control over land is also a ticket to natural resources.
Congo has massive reserves of gold and diamonds, most of
the world's columbo-tantalite and cassiterite (essential
materials for most electronic equipment), and many
deposits of rare minerals. Since the end of the war,
most of the local ethnic militias in northern Katanga,
which are known as the Mai Mai, have regrouped around
mining sites throughout the region and fought among
themselves or against soldiers of the national army for
their control. In 2005, in the town of Shabunda, in
Sud-Kivu, soldiers pitted persons with competing claims
over mineral-rich areas against one another and then
disarmed them when small-scale violence broke out--only
to exploit the concessions for themselves or hand them
over to third parties. Provincial and national
commanders were reportedly bribed into looking the other
way.
In most cases, economic tensions feed politically
motivated hostilities, and vice versa. Access to
resources means the ability to buy arms and reward
troops, and thus to secure political power; political
power, in turn, guarantees access to land and resources.
Tensions between the so-called indigenous communities
and people of Rwandan descent (who are often still
considered immigrants even though many of them have
lived in Congo for generations) also influence claims
over political representation. In Nord-Kivu, the Hutus
and the Nandes, the province's two largest ethnic
groups, have fought each other over control of
provincial politics. Factionalism and shifting alliances
complicate matters further. In each village, different
members of the same family or different branches of the
same clan compete to be designated chief under
traditional law. In 2002, Hunde and Nyanga elites fought
large-scale battles for control of the town of Pinga, in
Nord-Kivu. Hutus and Tutsis of Rwandan ancestry, who had
combated indigenous groups together during the late
1990s and early 2000s, split apart in 2006, after a law
confirmed that most of the Hutus among them were also
Congolese citizens, with rights to land ownership and
political representation, thus making the alliance less
important to them. Since then, they have tried to
partner with the Nandes, who won leadership of Nord-Kivu
in the 2006 elections. As a result of this shift, the
province's Tutsis have lost hope of gaining political
representation and become both more marginalized and
more radicalized.
THE CIRCLES OF HELL
FOR DECADES, these local tensions have also fueled
broader struggles at the regional and national
levels--and, at times, the other way around. Both
Congolese and foreign politicians have long manipulated
local leaders and fragmented militias to enrich
themselves, advance their careers, or rally support for
their causes. Local actors have also recruited national
allies. For example, in 1963, three years after Congo's
independence, tensions over access to land and
representation in local administrations in Nord-Kivu led
to tremendous violence between the "indigenous" groups
and the "immigrant" ones. To undermine the "immigrants"'
claims over land, the "indigenous" communities contested
their Congolese nationality; the "immigrants" then
turned to national politics for an alternative strategy.
They won the backing of then President Mobutu Sese Seko,
who favored promoting ethnic minorities because they
could help him govern without threatening his regime.
Several people of Rwandan descent thus got top political
positions, which they leveraged to help other people of
Rwandan descent increase their own economic, political,
and social power, notably in the Kivus. Still, in the
early 1980s, the "indigenous" lobby managed to get a law
passed denying "immigrants" Congolese citizenship. The
measure was not implemented, but it jeopardized the
political and economic status of people of Rwandan
descent and strongly reinforced their fear of
disenfranchisement. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s,
tensions over land and power caused frequent skirmishes
in Nord-Kivu.
These problems exploded in the 1990s, this time with a
regional dimension. In 1994, following the genocide in
Rwanda and the Tutsis' subsequent rise to power in
Kigali, one million Rwandan Hutu refugees, including
many militia members, flowed into the Kivus, bringing
with them raw rivalries from home. Indigenous Congolese
groups of all stripes organized themselves into Mai Mai
forces, and many allied themselves with the defeated
Rwandan Hutus, who were thankful for any support that
would help them survive in Congo's jungle and for access
to mining resources and thus a means to buy arms. The
interests of Paul Kagame's newly empowered Tutsi
government in Rwanda converged with those of the
Congolese Tutsis. Both sides originally intended merely
to protect their kinsfolk, but they quickly started
using their military might to seize land or capture
political power.
The fighting in the Kivus quickly evolved into a
full-scale regional and national war. In 1996, the
growing unpopularity of the Mobutu regime among Congo's
neighboring countries, as well as in the West, prompted
the formation of an alliance among a Congolese rebel
group with many members of Rwandan descent; the
governments of Rwanda, Burundi, Angola, and Uganda; and
southern Sudanese rebels. Within a year, the coalition
overthrew Mobutu and replaced him with its spokesperson,
Laurent Kabila. When the Rwandan army invaded Congo to
support the rebellion, it had two basic objectives:
hunting down Rwandan Hutu rebels in the Kivus and
protecting the Congolese of Rwandan ancestry there. It
soon developed a third: exploiting Congo's mineral
resources.
Once in power, Kabila quickly turned on his former
allies. He fired his Rwandan advisers, ended Congo's
military cooperation with Rwanda, and began inciting the
population to racial hatred toward Rwandans and
Congolese of Rwandan ancestry. With these groups feeling
increasingly threatened, in 1998 the governments of
Rwanda, Burundi, and Uganda helped engineer a new rebel
movement led by Congolese Tutsis. This alliance was less
successful than that of 1996 because it met with
opposition from the governments of Angola, Namibia, and
Zimbabwe, which sided with Kabila. The conflict quickly
turned into a stalemate, with a fierce guerrilla war
raging in the eastern provinces. Kabila managed to
contain Rwanda and its allies for several years thanks
to local proxies, the Mai Mai and Rwandan Hutu militias.
In the meantime, however, people of Rwandan descent and
Rwandan elites developed lucrative networks for
trafficking resources. The Rwandan army officially
withdrew from eastern Congo after the peace deal in
2003, but part of the Rwandan establishment has
continued to unofficially provide financial, logistical,
and military support to Congolese fighters of Rwandan
origin there.
Over the past few years, these long-standing local
disputes in eastern Congo have also been exacerbated by
political developments at the national level. For
example, many experts argue that Hema and Lendu factions
from Ituri have been violently asserting themselves
partly in reaction to their having been excluded from
the lengthy peace process that ended the last war in
2003. Similarly, the highly selective fashion in which
national actors picked Mai Mai representatives to the
transitional assembly that ran the country until the
2006 elections created widespread infighting among Mai
Mai forces in the Kivus and northern Katanga.
These tensions could have been managed peacefully, but
the 1998-2003 war destroyed the existing institutional
means to do so. Congo's justice system has collapsed,
like much of the state at large. The war dislocated many
communities, disrupting the operation of traditional
conflict-resolution mechanisms. The government's
all-around poor performance, especially its failure to
reestablish the rule of law in the eastern provinces,
has perpetuated a culture of impunity, which has
facilitated the use of violence, and the widespread
availability of small arms has made force an easily
accessible option for almost anybody. The national
security forces cannot be relied on to maintain
stability, because the utter lack of economic
development in the eastern provinces means that
belonging to an armed group is one of few profitable
occupations.
Today, most of the Mai Mai in Nord-Kivu remain allied to
Rwandan Hutu militias, support President Joseph Kabila
(the son of and immediate successor to Laurent Kabila,
who died in 2001), and continue to oppose the armed
Tutsi groups--all because doing so is still the best way
for them to consolidate their claims to ancestral land
rights and positions of authority. The Tutsis, for their
part, have recently rallied around Nkunda, who belonged
to the Rwanda-backed rebel movement that fought the
Congolese government during the last war. He refuses to
disarm and integrate his troops into the national army
in order to better protect his ethnic community, which
he believes is once again threatened by various local
and national Congolese groups. In keeping with Congo's
history since independence, the dispute between the Mai
Mai and the Tutsis has a regional dimension, too: Nkunda
is said to be recruiting fighters and obtaining arms
from Rwanda.
Thus, for much of the 1990s and early years of this
century, local tensions in the Kivus have repeatedly
prompted outbreaks of ethnic violence, with so-called
indigenous groups forming alliances with Rwandan Hutu
militias and, in response, the Rwandan government
supporting Congolese fighters of Rwandan ancestry and
intervening in the name of national security. And the
situation, which shows that local troubles in eastern
Congo jeopardize the entire country's stability, is
consistent with recent academic research about civil
wars. The Yale political scientist Stathis Kalyvas,
among other scholars, has shown how in many conflict
environments, land disputes, social antagonisms,
professional jealousies, family feuds, and romantic
rivalries become the fodder for tensions at the regional
and national levels. Local leaders learn to couch their
feuds in the rhetoric that dominates the national
discourse--be it about ideology, ethnicity, religion, or
class--in order to enlist support from government
actors. Conversely, national politicians use local
players to find the recruits, resources, and information
they need to pursue their own objectives. Local violence
may be fueled by regional and national antagonisms, but
it is above all motivated by distinctively local
tensions.
SEEING THE TREES FOR THE
FOREST
DISTINCTIVELY LOCAL agendas motivate a large part of the
ongoing violence in Congo, yet diplomats, UN officials,
and journalists have focused almost exclusively on the
regional and national problems. To ease economic and
security tensions between Congolese and Rwandan actors,
for example, diplomats and UN officials have organized
numerous dialogues and conferences in the region and
elsewhere, including some with the Congolese, Rwandan,
Burundian, and Ugandan governments to discuss their
support for various rebel groups, the repatriation of
Congolese refugees, and developing a code for the
exploitation of Congo's natural resources. In times of
crises, the UN leadership and African and Western
states, such as South Africa, the United States, and
European Union countries, have put pressure on the
Rwandan government, in some cases by threatening to
withdraw international aid, in order to prevent it from
invading Congo again. After the 2003 peace agreement,
former warlords were continuing to fight one another
politically and militarily, while Congolese military
leaders at all levels were diverting funds destined for
the national army. African and Western diplomats from
the 15 states and organizations involved in Congo's
postconflict transition endeavored to convince the
warlords to integrate their soldiers into the army,
supervised the disbursement of soldiers' pay to prevent
the diversion of funds, and trained a few integrated
brigades.
But this effort overlooked the critical fact that today
local conflicts are driving the broader conflicts, not
the other way around--and with counterproductive
effects. Most notably, the international community's
insistence on organizing elections in 2006 has ended up
jeopardizing the peace. There was no outbreak of
violence on the day of the polls; many Congolese were
enthusiastic about voting for the first time in their
lives. But the elections cemented Kabila's strongman
government, which is bent on harassing the opposition
and carrying on Mobutu's legacy of corruption--two
destabilizing factors. The election process itself was
also damaging. After the calm that immediately followed
the voting, many provinces experienced renewed tensions
along ethnic lines because of candidates who had
propagated hatred during their campaigns in order to
boost their popularity. The campaign was marred by major
intimidation and fraud, which significantly tipped the
balance of power at the provincial level. In Bas-Congo
and Kasai-Oriental, the contest further marginalized
minorities. The Tutsis of Nord-Kivu could not get any
representatives into the provincial assembly because
some 40,000 of them are refugees in Rwanda and cannot
vote. The National Assembly, moreover, now counts many
radicals bent on cleansing Congo of people of Rwandan
descent. The Tutsi minority's renewed fears that an
ethnic-cleansing campaign may be in the offing was a
major reason for Nkunda's popularity late last year and,
indirectly, for the renewed fighting in Nord-Kivu.
Instead of focusing solely on large-scale peacekeeping
and elections, the international community should have
also taken on other critical postconflict tasks, such as
institution building. But since 2003, diplomats and UN
officials have left it up to Congolese authorities,
Congolese religious leaders, and nongovernmental
organizations (NGOS) to conduct bottom-up peace-building
work. And with only a few exceptions, Congolese
authorities and religious leaders have been unable or
unwilling to conduct peace building locally--when they
have not been involved in fueling the violence outright.
A handful of NGOS, Congolese and international, have
implemented local conflict-resolution projects, but
their numbers have been too few, and they have faced too
many challenges to make much of a difference.
The UN-led peace process also did almost nothing to
promote good governance or reinforce Kinshasa's
administrative hold on the eastern provinces. This was a
major flaw, because the reestablishment of the rule of
law could have deterred some human rights abuses,
assuaged resentment over past communal violence, and
brought to all Congolese a level of personal and
material security that might have lessened their
dependence on armed groups. Instead, rivalries were left
to fester.
The result, besides a return to major violence, has been
the worsening of the underlying problems. The conflicts
have become increasingly decentralized, and the parties
have fragmented--meaning that the basic issues have
become even more localized than before. Journalists and
policymakers often talk of the Rwandan Hutu militias,
Tutsi dissidents, and the Mai Mai as if these were
coherent groups, but none has a unified command
structure. In the past several years, the Rwandan Hutu
militias have increasingly fractured; now, factions
fight one another over the spoils of looting, leadership
antagonisms, and whether to return to Rwanda. Subgroups
among the Tutsis in the Kivus have distinct and
sometimes inconsistent agendas. Although the Tutsis in
Nord-Kivu are currently aligned with Nkunda, relations
between them can be tense. In Sud-Kivu, the Tutsis are
divided between rich and poor clans, with the rich
reportedly supporting the local dissidents sometimes
called the Group of 47 and the poor backing the Kabila
government. Meanwhile, there is no hierarchy controlling
the Mai Mai, not nationally and sometimes not even
within a single city. Some Mai Mai groups are allied
with government troops (especially in Nord-Kivu), but
others are fighting against them and among themselves
(especially in Sud-Kivu and northern Katanga). The
factions are so subdivided that many brigade commanders
do not control their own battalion commanders. Even the
national army cannot rein in its soldiers; both officers
and members of the rank and file regularly loot, rape,
and commit other human rights violations or strike deals
with the militias they are ostensibly fighting in order
to gain access to resources.
THINKING LOCAL, ACTING LOCAL
GIVEN THE recent clashes, it is clear that more work is
urgently needed to deal with the violence at the
regional and national levels. Western and African
governments must intensify diplomatic pressure on the
Kabila government and on Nkunda in order to stop the
fighting immediately. Disbursing more humanitarian and
development aid would help prevent many deaths by
providing much-needed medical and nutritional
assistance, which the Congolese health system cannot do.
The UN Security Council should request that the UN use
its peacekeeping troops to protect those populations in
immediate danger rather than focusing on protecting UN
buildings and equipment. And the U.S. government must
drastically change its Rwanda policy, threatening to
sanction Kigali unless it prevents cross-border
activities in support of Nkunda.
But far more important, international actors must
radically rethink their peace-building strategy if they
want to accomplish more than yet another temporary
cease-fire. Since 2003, most diplomats and UN staff
members have been held back from getting involved at the
local level by four widespread assumptions: they have
treated Congo as a post-conflict situation, they have
assumed that violence is pervasive throughout the
country, they have relegated intervention to the
national and international realms, and they have acted
as though holding elections is an effective tool of
peace and state building. In fact, Congo today is in the
midst of a civil war, violence is not a normal feature
of life there, local peace building is a legitimate task
for international actors, and elections do little to
stabilize countries or build institutions, and they
sometimes hurt. Treating only the consequences of the
ongoing conflict without addressing its underlying
causes is absurd; the situation in Congo must be
approached from the bottom up.
The very first priority must be resolving land disputes
in eastern Congo. For starters, the Congolese government
must enact new land legislation that upholds the rights
of vulnerable people (such as women, minorities, and
returnees) and clarifies exactly when and how legal or
traditional ownership rights apply. Throughout the
country, but especially in the eastern provinces, the
new legislation must mandate a review of all land
property deeds. Local NGOS and judicial employees must
be sent to rural areas to explain property law to the
population there, which generally knows little of its
rights. The new law must also include a special
provision for resource-rich lands. Mining contracts for
Katanga and Kasai-Oriental, among other places, are
currently being reviewed; the process must be extended
to all of Congo, especially to the Kivus and Ituri,
where control over resources is an especially volatile
issue.
Land reform must also establish formal mechanisms for
resolving disputes through the local courts, to be
staffed with both judicial employees and representatives
of the affected communities, or through ad hoc
arrangements. Whenever necessary to ensure fairness or
prevent creating new resentments, people whose property
is being taken away should be compensated with money or
in kind. For example, the beneficiaries of
redistribution could be required to help the former
owners build another house or to share their harvest
with them. All adjudications should be handled free of
charge so that the most disenfranchised people have a
chance to claim what is theirs.
In areas where many families, clans, or ethnic groups
are deprived of the land they need to survive (such as
in Masisi, in Nord-Kivu, or Kabare, in Sud-Kivu), the
new legislation must also create provincial commissions
to design a fair redistribution policy. These should
include representatives from every local community and
social group, Congolese experts on land issues, and
neutral observers. They should focus on redressing
injustices and on finding sustainable solutions. As the
International Crisis Group suggests, for example, in the
territories of Masisi and Walikale, in Nord-Kivu, such a
commission should cancel all the title deeds for estates
and ranches issued since Congo's independence. It should
also compensate the former owners of expropriated land
and assign some of it to landless families (notably
among the Hundes, the Hutus, the Nyangas, and the
Tutsis, who are the main groups living in Masisi and
Walikale) for individual or collective use based on
whether it is fit for agriculture or animal grazing.
Broad land reforms such as these would prevent new
disputes, improve intercommunal relations, and help
extend state authority to the mining sites in the
region. It would also go some way toward ensuring that
the return of Tutsi refugees to the Kivus does not
trigger another major crisis.
It is important that these efforts target all the
communities in the Kivus, not just the population with
Rwandan ancestry and its traditional enemies. Even more
broadly, it is also important that all local actors have
a chance to air and resolve their grievances, be they
about land, sharing traditional and administrative
power, or anything else. To ensure a lasting peace, NGOS
should help recreate social links between communities in
conflict. The most effective strategy is to create
enterprises, health centers, markets, and schools in
whose success all the parties have a stake. A similar
approach has worked in parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Cambodia, and Tajikistan. Combined with land reform,
such a broad reconciliation program could help stem
violence, address most of the grievances that gave rise
to the Mai Mai, shrink the pool of local recruits for
regional and national warlords, reintegrate refugees and
displaced persons, and start rebuilding state
institutions.
THE SUPPORT GROUP
IDEALLY, THE Congolese would lead these initiatives. But
the government in Kinshasa is weak and corrupt, and
Congolese NGOS and civil-society representatives often
lack the funding, logistical means, and technical
capacity to implement effective peace-building programs.
International actors can help, but only if they make
resolving local conflicts a top priority instead of
concentrating only on humanitarian programs or macro
issues such as elections (as most groups currently based
in the eastern provinces are doing). Diplomats and UN
staffers have little experience developing and
implementing comprehensive programs addressing local
violence. They should urgently build up their capacity
by hiring experts on Congo and Rwanda and local conflict
resolution, sharing those specialists' knowledge with
all existing staff, and creating specialized offices or
departments in these areas.
Since last year, international actors have taken tiny
steps in the right direction. The United States and the
United Kingdom have opened consulates in Goma, the
capital of Nord-Kivu. The UN peacekeeping mission in
Congo (known by its French acronym MONUC) redeployed
troops to the eastern provinces, mostly to Nord-Kivu,
and is setting up buffer zones to separate the main
combatant groups. The few existing NGOS that focused on
local conflict resolution in the region are more active
than ever. The NGO Initiative pour un Leadership Cohésif
en RDC, for example, has organized several workshops
with local and national elites in order to help them
work out their differences, and the Life and Peace
Institute has intensified the funding, as well as the
teaching and logistical support, it gives to those
Congolese NGOS that do the best work promoting conflict
resolution in the Kivus.
But this is not enough. Furthermore, even
well-intentioned initiatives are often ill conceived. In
January 2008, for example, the Congolese government,
with strong diplomatic and UN support, organized a peace
conference in Goma to find a solution to the specific
problems of the Kivus. Participants did have a chance to
discuss their grievances over local political power,
land expropriation, and mining resources, but these
topics were not a priority. The conference focused
instead on neutralizing the most prominent warlords,
such as Nkunda and the major Mai Mai chiefs. A
cease-fire agreement was signed. But the gathering's
main accomplishment, a nonbinding "act of engagement,"
proposed no concrete solutions for local antagonisms.
And the fighting never stopped, not even during the
conference.
Donors would do better to expand the funding available
for local conflict resolution by increasing their aid
budgets or shifting their assistance priorities away
from elections. They should focus on helping the
Congolese government and representatives from all the
eastern communities work on land reform and the review
of mining contracts by providing independent experts on
land and judicial matters. Donors should also fund the
training of local Congolese NGOS and justice officials
so that they can be deployed as observers to the
land-redistribution commissions or sent to villages to
educate the rural population. And they should provide
the NGOS with the funds to compensate the parties who
will lose land. To ensure that any additional money goes
to efficient programs, donors should ask the experts on
local conflict resolution and the specialists on Congo
and Rwanda in their consulates to identify reliable
local peace builders in the eastern provinces. They
should offer financial support to the Congolese NGOS
that organize peace talks and reconciliation programs,
such as Plate-forme des Associations de Développement de
Bunyakiri, which brings together military, political,
business, and ethnic elites of the territory of
Bunyakiri, in Sud-Kivu, and Arche d'Alliance, which
helps victims of human rights violations in Sud-Kivu and
promotes the reform of existing human rights
legislation.
MONUC has an important supporting role to play. Although
some of its troops have been involved in resource
trafficking, sexual violence, and some brutal joint
operations with Congolese army personnel, the force's
presence has had a positive impact overall. If nothing
else, it has so far prevented the conflict in Nord-Kivu
from escalating into a regional or national war. Going
forward, MONUC should start working on resolving local
conflicts and distributing its resources differently
than it does now. (New directives from the UN's
Department of Peacekeeping Operations and MONUC's
leadership would allow for this, but a Security Council
resolution emphasizing the dangers of local tensions and
MONUC's responsibility in local peace building is
preferable, as it would help overcome any resistance by
UN staffers on the ground.) In the eastern provinces,
MONUC should deploy more military police and special
operations forces and fewer traditional troops, because
the former are better trained for action at the local
level, especially in logistically difficult
environments. In their daily work, military and civilian
UN staffers should help provincial authorities develop
the capacity to oversee the exploitation of mining
sites. In addition, MONUC should recruit well-trained
local peace building officials for deployment in the
eastern provinces, downsizing its staff in Kinshasa if
necessary. MONUC should also send civilian staffers with
the authority to draw on military, diplomatic, or
development resources to monitor local tensions and
suggest how best to broker peace. The existing Congolese
NGOS are ill equipped to address the local tensions
caused by military antagonisms or manipulated by
regional and national actors, and so international
donors and UN agencies should step in to assist them.
Such interventions would help address the broader
dimensions of the violence by both deterring local
warlords and offering them the possibility of
development assistance.
In the long term, local peace will be sustainable only
if the Congolese state is stable and its institutions
are built up at all levels. To that end, the Congolese
government must develop ways to integrate all the armed
groups, including Nkunda's troops and the Mai Mai, into
the national army; rebuild its justice system (an
essential step toward ending impunity and thus deterring
violence, assuaging communal resentment, and promoting
good governance); and solve the security problem posed
by the Rwandan Hutu militias (by resettling those
Rwandan Hutus who are not guilty of war crimes and
launching a campaign with MONUC to capture any
perpetrators of atrocities on the Congolese population
and the few Rwandans guilty of genocide still present in
the Kivus). These would be extremely difficult tasks
anywhere, and Congo, with its weak state, fragmented
political arena, refugee flows, and poor infrastructure,
is a particularly challenging environment. But with over
a thousand people still dying there every day and the
Kivus in the midst of a conflict that could easily
engulf the Great Lakes region again, something must be
done. The best approach is to make a priority of
treating core problems at the local level, especially
long-standing land disputes, rather than focusing
exclusively on managing their broader consequences. When
it comes to Congo, international actors should work,
quite literally, from the ground up.
MAP: DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF
THE CONGO
PHOTO (BLACK & WHITE): The
wretched of the earth: refugees at a camp in Goma,
Congo, 1994