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AFRICA NEWS
DR Congo needs rebel reintegration plan: UN
by Staff Writers
Kinshasa (AFP) Nov 13, 2013


Military trial set for former Ivory Coast security chief
Abidjan (AFP) Nov 13, 2013 - A top security officer in the government of former Ivory Coast president Laurent Gbagbo is to go on trial for atrocities in the coming weeks, the military prosecutor said Wednesday.

The closed-door trial of Jean-Noel Abehi will be held between November 21 and December 31 but the precise dates will not be made public "for security reasons", Ange Kessi told AFP.

The charges also include "desertion abroad" and "plotting", he said.

Abehi, who commanded an armoured squadron at the Agban paramilitary police barracks in Ivory Coast's commercial capital Abidjan, fled the country after a bloody post-electoral crisis from December 2010 to April 2011, when Gbagbo refused to accept defeat in elections.

The conflict claimed 3,000 lives in Ivory Coast, the world's top cocoa producer and once a beacon of stability in the region.

Abehi was arrested in Ghana in February this year and extradited to Ivory Coast.

He is considered by his detractors and international humanitarian groups to be one of the main instigators of atrocities committed by Gbagbo's regime, particularly during its last throes, and faces 20 years in prison, according to Kessi.

The government of President Alassane Ouattara also suspects Abehi of involvement in attempts at destabilising the country and attacks against Ivory Coast security forces in late 2012.

In October 2012, in the first major trial stemming from the crisis, a top Gbagbo general, Brunot Dogbo Ble, was jailed for 15 years for complicity in the murder of a retired officer.

Gbagbo's supporters accuse Ouattara of meting out "victor's justice" as no one from his own camp has faced prosecution, though one pro-Ouattara militia chief is under investigation.

Gbagbo is currently being held by the International Criminal Court in The Hague, where he has been charged with crimes against humanity.

The Democratic Republic of Congo needs a plan to disarm, demobilise and reintegrate ex-rebels, the United Nations said Wednesday, a week after helping the army defeat the 18-month-old M23 insurgency.

The UN secretary general's deputy special representative to the DR Congo, Abdallah Wafi, told reporters such a plan -- dubbed "DDR" -- was key to ensuring peace in the country's troubled east.

"I would like to emphasise the need for the DRC authorities to have a DDR plan... that benefits all the components of armed groups. Long-term peace and security cannot be guaranteed in the Kivus (eastern provinces) without it," he said.

The M23 rebellion announced on November 5 it was laying down its arms after a bruising offensive by the Congolese army and a special UN intervention brigade.

Some M23 fighters surrendered to the regular army and the UN mission, others had defected to Rwanda in April and hundreds more found refuge in Uganda when the fighting wound up.

But many more remain at large and several other armed groups still roam the mineral-rich region, especially in the North Kivu province where the M23 was active and in neighbouring South Kivu.

Kinshasa has vowed to build on its most significant military victory in half a century by going after the FDLR, a Kivu-based Rwandan group that includes the remnants of Hutu militia who carried out the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.

So-called DDR programmes are designed to disband ex-rebel groups, strip them of their weapons and find ways of reinserting them in civilian life.

DR Congo's UN-backed forces made short work of the M23 in the offensive launched late last month, and both sides had been expected to sign a peace deal on Monday.

The process collapsed at the last minute however, with the government rejecting the idea of signing a binding agreement with a defeated group.

The fate of the ex-rebels was also contentious, with the proposed deal rejecting any amnesty for around 100 commanders and officers suspected of war crimes.

Speaking by video link from North Kivu, the head of the UN peacekeeping mission in DR Congo, MONUSCO, warned his troops would disarm the M23 forcefully if the group failed to do so voluntarily.

"We are determined to fight them. We would prefer the peaceful way, but we have seen the last of MONUSCO's cohabitation with armed groups," Martin Kobler said.

Uganda says that 1,400 M23 fighters have sought refuge on its soil, but Kobler did not confirm the figure.

"The numbers aren't very clear. Right now we will prepare DDR camps... for 1,400 but we need to have a sorting process," he said, warning there could be refugees among them.

DR Congo's DDR chief Roger Musombo told AFP during a visit to Bogota last week that he was looking to draw from Colombia's experience in reintegrating ex-rebel fighters.

Most M23 members were former members of another rebel group, the CNDP, who had joined the regular army after a 2009 deal with Kinshasa. They mutinied in April 2012, charging the government had not kept its end of the bargain.

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