Jump to navigation

Uganda

Kampala pays war reparations to Kinshasa

In his eagerness to woo Tshisekedi, Museveni makes a down payment on disputed debt

Uganda's move to pay the first US$65 million installment towards its $325m reparations bill to Congo-Kinshasa, despite describing the Netherlands-based International Court of Justice (ICJ) decision to award the monies as 'unfair and wrong', is the latest sign of diplomatic rapprochement between Kampala and Kinshasa.

It stands in sharp contrast to the continuing uneasy relations that both Congo-K and Uganda have with Rwanda, whose military has also been accused of pillaging the mineral wealth of eastern Congo.

After finding the Ugandan army guilty of war crimes in 2005, it took until February for the ICJ to order Uganda to pay $225m for loss of lives, $60m for looting, plunder and exploitation of natural resources and $40m for property damage related to actions by the Ugandan army during the Congo war between 1998 and 2003.

But compared with the $11 billion demanded by Congo-K, it is a relatively small sum (Dispatches 18/5/21, Kampala takes on another military mission which could cool bilateral tensions over gold-looting in Ituri province).

The ICJ's president Joan Donaghue had ruled that the reparations were compensatory and not meant to be punitive. The payment and its receipt was confirmed by treasury officials in Kampala and Kinshasa on Monday (12 September).

Relations between the two countries have improved since Félix Tshisekedi took over the presidency in Congo-K in January 2019, launching the joint Operation Shujaa late last year against the Islamic State-affiliated Allied Democratic Forces rebels who have been blamed for thousands of killings in the Kivu provinces of eastern Congo-K and recent bomb attacks in Uganda. However, Tshisekedi's decision to allow Ugandan forces onto Congolese soil has caused disquiet among some senior officers in the Congo-K army (AC Vol 62 No 24, Kampala bombings linked to Islamic State).

Kampala and Kinshasa also agreed a $330m deal to rebuild and develop the road network in the Kivus and links the two countries (AC Vol 63 No 10, Kenya sponsors risky anti-militia plan).



Related Articles

Kampala bombings linked to Islamic State

Regional security services say they have uncovered training networks and a cash pipeline of hundreds of thousands of dollars to fighters affiliated with the group

The double suicide-bomb attack in Kampala on 16 November was the fourth terrorist explosion in Uganda in two months. Security services in the region are focused on what they see as...


Kenya sponsors risky anti-militia plan

Nairobi has assembled regional states to fight Congolese armed groups, but they include the very countries the groups depend on for aid

An agreement by regional governments to form a joint military force to deploy against armed groups in Congo-Kinshasa looks like a diplomatic masterstroke by Kenya, which is coordin...


Kigali wins another round of the blame game

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon held an emergency meeting with President Paul Kagame in Kigali on 8 September after the Rwandan government threatened to withdraw from UN peacekeeping missions. Kigali’s logic was unassailable. A draft UN report had suggested that Rwandan troops might have committed ‘crimes of genocide’ in eastern Congo-Kinshasa in 1997; if the UN endorsed those claims, Kigali said it would have no choice but to withdraw its 3,500  troops from the UN force in Darfur, Sudan.

The credibility of the United Nations is on trial again after the leaking of its draft 545-page report mapping human rights violations in Congo-Kinshasa in 1993-2003. It seems almo...


M23 may be close to a deal

Moves are afoot to reintegrate the rebels, ending the revolt by agreeing to their demands and putting Jean-Bosco Ntaganda out in the cold

The Mouvement du 23 mars appears close to a peace agreement with President Joseph Kabila, Africa Confidential has learned. A violent split in M23 at the end of February saw serious...