Each time violence escalates in eastern DR Congo, the same question returns: why has one of Africa’s most resource-rich regions remained trapped in conflict for so long? Over the past two decades, peace agreements have been signed, military operations launched, and diplomatic initiatives introduced. Yet instability continues to define daily life for millions of people.
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The ongoing persistence of conflict should force a sober reassessment. The crisis in eastern DR Congo is not simply a military problem that can be solved by military action. It is a political crisis rooted in governance challenges since colonial authority came to settle historical tensions, and regional dynamics that have yet to be fully addressed. Military responses may sometimes be necessary to protect civilians and prevent armed groups from expanding their control. However, experience has repeatedly shown that force alone cannot produce lasting peace. Without political solutions, military gains are meaningless often temporary, and cycles of violence inevitably re-emerge.
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One of the most serious yet often underestimated dimensions of the conflict is the continued presence and gradual expansion of genocide ideology in parts of eastern DR Congo and across the Great Lakes region. The ideology that culminated in the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi did not disappear with the end of that tragedy. Instead, remnants of it moved across borders, reorganising within armed networks that found refuge in fragile and poorly governed areas of the vast DR Congo.
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In eastern DR Congo, some of these groups continue to propagate narratives rooted in ethnic hatred, denial, and historical revisionism. Such narratives are not only dangerous for Rwanda; they also undermine stability within DR Congo itself by deepening mistrust between communities and fueling new cycles of mobilisation.
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When extremist ideology becomes intertwined with armed violence, the consequences extend far beyond local conflicts. It transforms insecurity into a long-term regional threat that cannot be ignored. Addressing genocide ideology, therefore, is not simply a matter of historical accountability, it is a central element of preventing future instability.
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At the same time, any honest analysis of the crisis must acknowledge the suffering and grievances of local populations in eastern DR Congo. For many communities, particularly the Congolese Tutsi, decades of displacement, exile, insecurity, and economic neglect have eroded confidence in national or international institutions meant to protect them. In such environments, prolific armed groups often find fertile ground for recruitment and influence.
This is why lasting peace requires more than disarmament campaigns or military offensives. It requires rebuilding governance, restoring state authority in a legitimate and inclusive manner, and investing in economic opportunities that allow communities to move beyond survival toward stability and development.
The international community is alleged to have played an important role in supporting peace efforts in eastern DR Congo, particularly through UN peacekeeping operations and diplomatic engagement. These initiatives might have helped prevent even deeper crises at various moments. Yet external support cannot substitute for a much needed strong political will within DR Congo and the region itself.
Ultimately, sustainable solutions must come from regional leadership willing to confront the root causes of the conflict. This includes addressing the presence of armed groups such as the Kinshasa-backed genocidal FDLR militia, tied to extremist ideologies, strengthening cooperation between neighboring states, and building trust where suspicion has too often dominated relations.
The regional dimension of the crisis is impossible to ignore. The Great Lakes region is deeply interconnected by history, and instability in eastern DR Congo affects neighboring countries in multiple ways, from security threats and refugee movements to economic disruption and diplomatic tensions.
For Rwanda, stability in eastern DR Congo remains an issue of both regional peace and national security. Many armed groups linked to the legacy of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda continue to operate in the area, and their presence represents a serious concern that cannot simply be dismissed or ignored. Addressing such challenges requires regional cooperation, responsible diplomacy, and a clear understanding that security in the Great Lakes region is shared. A proper threats assessment needs to be professionally carried out now.
At the same time, sustainable progress will depend on moving beyond narratives that oversimplify the crisis or overlook its deeper causes. Peace will require dialogue, accountability, and a willingness to confront uncomfortable truths about governance failures, colonial historical grievances, and the dangers posed by extremist ideology.
The lesson from the past two decades is clear. Military action can contain violence, but it cannot resolve the forces that sustain conflict. Only political will, combined with regional cooperation and a firm commitment to confronting genocide ideology, can create the conditions for lasting peace. The future of eastern DR Congo, and the stability of the Great Lakes region as a whole, will depend on whether such leadership emerges and stops looking for scapegoats to replace it for blames where it is visibly failing.
The writer is a political and diplomatic analyst specialising on Africa and countries of the Great Lakes Region.