Museveni explains Uganda’s troop deployment to DR Congo
Friday, March 31, 2023

Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has clarified his country’s latest military deployment to eastern DR Congo, as part of the East African Community regional force, saying the soldiers were sent there not to fight the M23 rebels, but "to act as a neutral force as the Congolese use the time to sort out their political problems.”

The Ugandan army (UPDF), on March 29, flagged off a contingent becoming the third country to deploy in the regional force, after Kenya and Burundi.

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In a March 30 statement, Museveni – who was responding to media reports that claimed that the Ugandan troops would fight the rebels fighting the Congolese government forces in North Kivu province – said that the UPDF will support the peace plan agreed between the Congolese government and the M23, including the rebels’ withdrawal.

Not there to fight

Musevein said UPDF’s initial mission is to occupy some of the positions that the M23 rebels already handed over to the East African Force as a neutral force, "instead of the Congolese Army which the M-23 see as enemies or armed opponents in their internal politics.”

Museveni stated: "We are, therefore, going to the Bunagana-Rutshuru area, not in order to fight the M-23, but to act as a neutral force as the Congolese use the time to sort out their political problems.

"Unless we are attacked, we are not there to fight. Fighting may come later if one of the non-state armed groups does not accept peace on what we all regard as reasonable conditions.”

The regional force was first deployed in November 2022.

It is mandated to support efforts to stabilize eastern DR Congo, a region rich in mineral resources and home to more than 130 local and foreign armed groups including the FDLR, a terrorist group sanctioned by the Security Council in 2013.

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The Commander Land Force Lt Gen Kayanja Muhanga presided over the flagging-off of the Uganda Peoples’ Defence Forces Contingent to serve under the East African Community Regional Force (EACRF) in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Courtesy

Ever since its deployment, the regional force took control of positions vacated by the M23 rebels as par the November 23, 2022 Luanda agreement signed by regional leaders in the Angolan capital.

While in Luanda in November 2022, regional leaders expressed concern about "the persistence of negative and terrorist forces” in the eastern DR Congo, which they noted, "constitutes a threat to peace, security, and stability in the sub-region.” They decided that all local and foreign armed groups should put down weapons.

In particular, three foreign armed groups, FDLR from Rwanda, RED-Tabara from Burundi, and the ADF from Uganda, were mentioned.

Handle eastern DR Congo problem politically

Museveni said peace talks between the M23 and the Congolese government have been going on and "should continue so that the problem is handled politically.”

Despite its gains in persuading the M23 to withdraw, the regional force faces pressure from Congolese politicians and civil society who want it to battle the M23 rebels.

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Although Kinshasa maintains that the regional force’s mandate is ‘unequivocally offensive,’ for Museveni, the EAC heads of state would "have to mandate us to fight if one of the stakeholders refuses to implement the peace agreement we have agreed on.”

"That, however, is not the case now,” he said.

The Kenyan General commanding the regional force, Maj Gen Jeff Nyagah, in November 2022, said that a military solution would be the last option.

Under a bilateral mechanism with Kinshasa, Uganda already has troops in DR Congo’s Ituri province, where they are fighting the ADF, a Ugandan militia responsible for various human rights abuses both in Uganda and in DR Congo.

Museveni said the Ugandan troops in Ituri had "seriously degraded ADF” and that Congolese farmers were able to harvest their Cocoa for the first time in many years.