Congo peace helped by positive meeting
07:02 a.m. Oct 13, 1999 Eastern By Paul Busharizi
KAMPALA, Oct 13 - The peace process in the Democratic Republic of the Congo was boosted this week when the parties met and agreed on basic measures to help prevent a new round of fighting, diplomats said on Wednesday.
They gave formal security guarantees for U.N. peacekeepers who will monitor compliance with the peace deal and made substantial progress on defining the territory controlled by each of the forces and the number of troops they have on the ground.
The advances came at the first meeting of the Joint Military Commission (JMC), which is charged with implementing the peace deal and includes officials from the Congolese government, three rebel groups and five other African nations who sent troops to fight on either side of the Congo war.
The two-day JMC meeting ended in the Ugandan capital Kampala late on Tuesday with neutral observers claiming more success than they had hoped for.
''We wondered whether the parties would overcome their personal animosities to make the necessary compromises,'' one diplomat said. ''I am amazed at the progress that has been made.''
Algerian General Rachid Lallali, who currently chairs the JMC, said he was encouraged by progress at the talks.
''The spirit of understanding and cooperation is very high among the members of the commission,'' he told Reuters.
The Congo war began in August 1998 and sucked in at least five other African nations, with Uganda and Rwanda backing rival rebel factions and Zimbabwe, Angola and Namibia all backing Congolese President Laurent Kabila.
But a pan-African peace deal was agreed in August.
It calls for separation of the rival armies, demobilisation of irregular militia groups operating inside Congo, a national dialogue on the country's political future and the withdrawal of all foreign armies.
Kabila and the rebels have repeatedly accused each other of violating the ceasefire but all sides have continued to stress their support for the peace process.
A team of 90 U.N. observers is to prepare the ground for the deployment of a 500-strong peacekeeping force but its deployment in the conflict zones had been delayed because of continuing insecurity.
The security guarantees offered in Kampala on Tuesday should allow that deployment soon but no firm date has yet been set. |