DR Congo: Global coalition urges UN to act on Congolese Tutsi extermination threat
Sunday, March 09, 2025
Members of DR Congo's Tutsi community, undergo torture in Eastern DR Congo. File

A coalition of over 400 intellectuals including academics, lawyers, religious leaders and artists - from more than 50 countries is pressing the United Nations to address the escalating persecution of Congolese Tutsi in eastern DR Congo, warning of a looming threat of extermination.

In an open letter to UN Secretary-General António Guterres, the group demands urgent intervention to halt atrocities against the vulnerable community.

Signatories include prominent figures such as Senegalese author Boubacar Boris Diop, Rwandan-French writer and singer Gaël Faye, and genocide survivors Yolande Mukagasana, Esther Mujawayo, and Félicité Lyamukuru.

The letter also carries the support of scientists, academics, and political leaders like Professor Charles Murigande, former Rwandan ambassador and foreign minister, and Dr. Alain Destexhe, a former Belgian senator. Victim associations from DR Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, the United States, Canada, France, Belgium, and Papua New Guinea have joined the call, reflecting global alarm over the violence.

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The letter highlights a surge in hate speech and attacks targeting Congolese Tutsi, drawing parallels to historical atrocities. It challenges the oversimplified narrative of the crisis as a resource-driven conflict tied to Rwanda’s alleged support for the M23 rebel group, arguing that this framing obscures the brutal reality.

"This misinterpretation, widely echoed in the media, overlooks the daylight atrocities—killings, mutilations, and even cannibalism—inflicted on Congolese Tutsi by their executioners,” the letter states.

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The signatories emphasise the conflict’s complexity, involving multiple armed factions with divergent aims. They single out the FDLR genocidal militia and the Wazalendo, both of which have openly vowed to exterminate Congolese Tutsi.

The letter also accuses MONUSCO, the UN peacekeeping mission in DR Congo, of abandoning neutrality by aligning with armed groups backed by the Congolese government. "MONUSCO has deviated from its peacekeeping mandate, associating with dangerous militias,” the group asserts.

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The coalition proposes several urgent steps for the UN: