Tanzania is ready to send troops to
the Democratic Republic of Congo to fight M23 rebels who are making advances to
the capital Kinshasa, a minister has said.
Foreign Affairs and International
Cooperation minister Bernard Membe said Thursday that the country would,
however, only send its troops if the UN headquarters in New York immediately
mandated the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) to deploy troops in DRC.
Presidents from the Great Lakes
Region are meeting in Kampala Friday for a crisis summit during which they will
discuss the deteriorating situation in eastern DRC where the rebels have
captured Goma and Sake, 20km away, and vowed to press on with their offensive
to take the South Kivu provincial capital of Bukavu, 300km south of Goma.
Mr Membe said leaders within the
region under their chairman, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, had called a
crisis summit to discuss the matter and see how they could arrest the
situation.
The minister said the UN was
currently using Chapter 6 of its resolutions, which basically allowed
peacekeeping and not peace enforcement. In peace enforcement, the UN troops
would, if need be, use force to execute their mandate.
Presently, there were over 17,000
troops under the UN who were not doing much to protect the Congolese people and
instead, they were only “observing things”.
“We condemn what the rebels are
doing in eastern Congo….it is unacceptable to Tanzania. But there is an
International Conference of the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) in Kampala tomorrow
(today), which was called expressly to discuss the matter,” Mr Membe
said.
He said the situation in eastern
Congo had huge impact on all East African states and, if left unchecked, would
result in huge numbers of refugees and internally displaced people.
Source: http://www.africareview.com
Source: http://www.africareview.com
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