2006年VOA标准英语-UN Calls for Negotiations in Eastern DRC(在线收听

By Naomi Schwarz
Dakar
27 November 2006

United Nations officials in the Democratic Republic of Congo are calling for an end to hostilities in the eastern region bordering Rwanda. U.N. peacekeepers earlier intervened to block forces loyal to renegade rebel leader Laurent Nkunda from advancing further after the rebels captured a small town on Sunday. Naomi Schwarz reports from VOA's regional bureau in Dakar.

---

Policemen secure area in center of Kinshasa, 27 Nov. 2006
Policemen secure area in center of Kinshasa, 27 Nov. 2006
U.N. officials and local journalists say several people were killed and thousands fled their homes in eastern DRC, in the wake of clashes between rebel forces, Congolese military, and U.N. troops.

U.N. spokesman Kemal Saiki says that the international organization is appealing for calm.

"We are calling for an immediate end to the fighting," Saiki explained, "and we are emphasizing the fact that what brought about this fighting is a political issue, and the political issue, the only way to solve them is to address them through a political solution."

The DRC's Minister of Interior and the deputy head of the U.N. mission there have gone to the region to try to negotiate with the rebels.

When the DRC's civil war ended in 2003, General Nkunda refused to join the newly integrated army. Since then, there have been several clashes with Nkunda's forces.

Nkunda has said that he wants to protect his people, Congolese ethnic Tutsis, who he says face persecution from the new army.

But Jason Stearns, an analyst for the Brussels-based think tank, International Crisis Group, says he does not believe this most recent unrest was not part of a larger strategy.

"The trigger appears to have been the killing of a Tutsi civilian who was close to one of the commanders in this group," Stearns said. "He was killed at a police checkpoint in the town of Saké just to the west of Goma. So after he was killed, the dissident forces, who are under the command of General Laurent Nkunda launched an attack on the town of Saké."

Goma is a major city near Rwanda's border. In fighting in 2004, Nkunda's fighters had briefly taken over the other major eastern city, Bukavu.

Humanitarian organizations have accused Nkunda of war crimes and human rights abuses.

The U.N. spokesman Saiki says that only the Congolese government can decide whether to arrest Nkunda.

"I cannot speculate about that. This is a question that should be addressed to the Congolese government," Saiki said.

Congo's capital, Kinshasa, also recently experienced unrest surrounding the results of the October 29 presidential election. Incumbent President Joseph Kabila who is popular in the east won the vote, but results have yet to be certified amid a challenge by his rival former Uganda-backed rebel Jean-Pierre Bemba.

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/11/35815.html