Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is sending the top U.S. diplomat for Africa to Kinshasa for talks on the violence and humanitarian crisis in the eastern provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the DRC. Assistant Secretary for State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer will also have talks with Rwandan officials. VOA's David Gollust reports from the State Department.
The decision to send Frazer to the area reflects growing U.S. concern about the resurgence of violence in the eastern DRC, which has displaced tens of thousands of people in an area where humanitarian conditions are already tenuous.
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U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer at a meeting with regional heads of state in Nairobi, Kenya to discuss Somalia's crisis, 29 Oct. 2008 |
The assistant secretary of state, who attended a meeting in Nairobi this week on the situation in Somalia, is due in the DRC capital Thursday, and will either go on to Kigali or hold telephone talks with Rwandan leaders.
Fighting in the eastern DRC, under way on and off for more than a decade, has surged in recent weeks with clashes between a rebel group and the Congolese army, and U.N. peacekeepers caught in the crossfire.
At a news briefing, State Department Spokesman Sean McCormack said Rice dispatched Frazer to Kinshasa after telephone contacts with, among others, Belgian Foreign Minister Karel De Gucht.
He said Frazer, in her discussions with officials of the DRC and Rwanda, will explore ways to defuse regional tensions.
He added, "A lot of these tensions result from various ethnic groups in those regions, in the Great Lakes region, as well tensions that exist between Rwanda and the DRC. So we are working to try to, as best we can, minimize those tensions, work the political side, support the U.N. in its efforts to get more troops in there and get more capabilities in there. That's a U.N. process but we support them in doing that."
A State Department statement issued late Tuesday expressed deep U.S. concern about the worsening humanitarian situation in the eastern DRC, and called for all parties to meet commitments to recent cease-fire and renunciation of force agreements.
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General Laurent Nkunda |
It specifically urged the ethnic-Tutsi Congolese rebel group led by renegade general Laurent Nkunda - the CNDP - to avoid further fighting, rescind its call for open revolt against the DRC, and resume talks with the democratically elected and internationally recognized government in Kinshasa.
The State Department called for the mainly ethnic-Hutu rebel group active in the area - the FDLR - to also lay down its arms, disband and demobilize.
A senior official who spoke to reporters here said U.S. officials are concerned about reports of outside support for rebels in Congo, from Rwanda among other places.
Tuesday's statement called for all the countries of the Great Lakes region to work together to enhance stability and respect each other's sovereignty.
The senior official said the U.S. Agency for International Development is considering ways to get additional relief aid into the area but that the fighting makes deliveries very difficult. |