Jump to navigation

Rwanda

Washington wants security-mining deal finalised by end of June

Demands by Washington and Kinshasa for Rwanda to withdraw its troops are the key sticking point

The United States is stepping up the pressure on Kigali and Kinshasa to conclude a security-minerals access deal by the end of June. Both Washington and Kinshasa insist that Rwanda withdraw all its troops from Congo-Kinshasa as a prerequisite.

Troy Fitrell, the top official in the US State Department’s Africa bureau, told an online conference that officials were ‘shooting for a June or July peace agreement’. Technical teams would hold further talks in the coming days, he said on 12 June. Fitrell is due to leave the State Department in mid-July.

President Donald Trump’s senior Africa advisor Massad Fares Boulos wants a peace and security deal signed in June, alongside US minerals-access agreements with both Rwanda and Congo-K (AC Vol 66 No 8, Washington tries a new push in Kinshasa).

The requirement for a Rwandan army exit is at the heart of a draft accord produced by Washington and is a key sticking points to an agreement. Officials in Congo-K President Félix Tshisekedi’s office have accused Rwanda of dragging its feet in negotiations. Tshisekedi’s office says that there will be ‘no compromise’ on a full Rwandan withdrawal of troops and equipment.

A planned meeting in Washington between the two countries’ foreign ministers was shelved in May (AC Dispatches, 6/5/25, Ceasefire, minerals deal and troops out as peace deal takes shape). The Qatari government is hosting its own mediation talks on the conflict, with US support.

A new report by the New York-based Human Rights Watch is likely to amp up the diplomatic pressure on Kigali. Published earlier this month, HRW concludes that M23 executed at least 21 civilians over two days in February in Goma, the main city in Kivu Nord, which the Kigali-backed insurgents had captured in January.



Related Articles

Libya links worry Wall Street

US prosecutors are scrutinising the methods used to get lucrative Libyan investments and the role of brokers and agents

The United States regulatory authorities are closing in on several cases involving US financial institutions and possible bribes and commissions for the late Colonel Moammer el Gadaffi's son,...


Blowback

Investigations in France, Nigeria and the United States into claims that the US company Halliburton was party to a US$180 million slush fund to bribe Nigerian officials are...


Court documents show Gertler at centre of $360m cash laundry

A Swiss court has evidence of the vast sums international companies were paying to politicians in exchange for mining rights

Dan Gertler, middleman in one of the world's biggest mining scandals, laundered money and paid US$360 million in cash bribes to high-ranking politicians in Congo-Kinshasa, according to court...