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Viewing cable 08KINSHASA683, UNHCR EXPANDING ITS ACTIVITIES IN NORTH KIVU

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08KINSHASA683 2008-08-20 09:51 2011-08-25 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Kinshasa
VZCZCXRO4621
RR RUEHBZ RUEHDU RUEHGI RUEHJO RUEHMR RUEHRN
DE RUEHKI #0683/01 2330951
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 200951Z AUG 08
FM AMEMBASSY KINSHASA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 8320
RUEHLGB/AMEMBASSY KIGALI 4819
INFO RUEHXR/RWANDA COLLECTIVE
RUCNSAD/SOUTHERN AF DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY COLLECTIVE
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 2177
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHDC
RHMFISS/HQ USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE
RUZEJAA/JAC MOLESWORTH RAF MOLESWORTH UK
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 KINSHASA 000683 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PREL PREF PGOV MOPS KPKO CG RW UN
SUBJECT: UNHCR EXPANDING ITS ACTIVITIES IN NORTH KIVU 
 
1.  (SBU) Summary:  Embassy's Political Officer in Goma spoke with 
the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) leadership in Goma, 
Coordinator for the East Karl Steinacker and Head of Sub-Office 
Ibrahima Coly.  After years of minimal involvement in North Kivu, 
UNHCR is ramping up programs in the conflict-affected province by 
restructuring its country operation, increasing staff, and 
addressing assistance gaps within UN clusters.  UNHCR explained how 
the clusters are still a bit ad hoc and adjusted to the 
peculiarities of North Kivu, and that expanding its historically 
small presence should not be done for its own sake but as a way to 
add value to the humanitarian operation in place.  UNHCR also 
mentioned signs of spontaneous returns from Uganda and touched on 
the recent tripartite negotiations between the GDRC and the GOR. 
End summary. 
 
UNHCR's Restructured Programs in the East 
----------------------------------------- 
 
2.  (SBU) Coordinator for the East Karl Steinacker and Head of 
Sub-Office Ibrahima Coly are the two newest and most senior members 
of UNHCR's team in Goma.  Their arrival was part of a UNHCR 
expansion in North Kivu that started with the 2005 decision to 
implement UN clusters in the DRC.  Until that time there had been a 
very small UNHCR presence in Goma and activities in the east had 
been largely focused further south on Congolese refugee returns from 
Burundi and Tanzania.  The sub-office at the time was Uvira while 
Goma and Bukavu were smaller field offices.  Today, Uvira is a field 
office and both Goma and Bukavu are sub-offices.  At the Kinshasa 
level, the UNHCR representative was made a D-2 position with two 
deputies:  one in Kinshasa and one in Goma, the latter covering the 
provinces of both Kivus and Province Oriental.  The deputy in Goma 
is now called the Coordinator for the East. 
 
UNHCR and the Clusters 
---------------------- 
 
3.  (SBU) As the UN cluster approach was rolled out in the DRC, UN 
agencies agreed that these should not entirely replace the 
humanitarian structures that were already in place.  Thus, the 
clusters remain a bit ad hoc.  This also meant that an expanding 
UNHCR was not able to easily assume its traditional cluster 
responsibilities since several other agencies remained involved in 
those activities.  For UNHCR this now means balancing the role of 
cluster lead in protection, camp coordination and camp management 
(CCCM), and shelter without stepping on the toes of other 
organizations already active in these sectors. 
 
4.  (SBU) With regards to the shelter cluster, the Rapid Response 
Mechanism (RRM) managed by the UN Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) 
makes UNHCR's efforts almost superfluous.  The RRM program provides 
emergency assistance -- including shelter -- for newly displaced 
individuals for up to three months (which is why one sees more 
UNICEF plastic sheeting in North Kivu than that of UNHCR).  The 
early recovery cluster that is run by both UNHCR and UNDP will 
implicate UNHCR in shelter assistance in the case of refugee returns 
or mixed refugee/IDP returns. 
 
5.  (SBU) Concerning the CCCM cluster, activities are very much 
influenced by the humanitarian situation before 2008.  In early 2007 
there were no IDP camps and with the security situation so fluid in 
North Kivu all displacement was considered temporary as fighting 
would die down and pick up somewhere else.  The RRM was a mechanism 
to respond with three months worth of assistance, after which IDPs 
were likely to go home.  But with the rise of Laurent Nkunda's 
"Congres National pour la Defense du Peuple" (CNDP), displacement 
appeared to be more ethnically driven and more permanent.  UNHCR 
felt, therefore, that camps were necessary in order to better 
deliver assistance.  There are currently 18 IDP sights that fall 
under CCCM coordination in both Kivus. 
 
6.  (SBU) The rollout of the CCCM cluster caused some contention, 
even if it is agreed by numerous humanitarian actors that it greatly 
improved delivery of assistance to IDPs.  According to Steinacker it 
was viewed by other agencies as an implicit criticism of the way 
business had been run up to that point using the RRM approach.  It 
was agreed, therefore, that the RRM process would remain as the 
first response mechanism and that it would be replaced by CCCM 
activities after three months.  It was also agreed that CCCM 
activities would have to be coordinated with the Goma Comite 
Permanent Inter Agence (CPIA), the OCHA-led coordination body for 
humanitarian activities.  Many agencies also felt the creation of 
camps would create a pull for all people who felt insecure, 
something for which UNHCR believes there has yet to be evidence. 
Consequently - according to UNHCR - there are serious disagreements 
 
KINSHASA 00000683  002 OF 003 
 
 
between the CPIA and UNHCR with regards to standards.  The UN High 
Commissioner for Refugees himself, Antonio Guterres, spoke out about 
this recently, insisting that UNHCR's full standards be applied in 
the DRC as they would be anywhere else. 
 
7.  (SBU) Activities that fall within the protection cluster are 
co-managed by UNHCR and MONUC (primarily the human rights office). 
This is another area in which UNHCR has been increasing its role 
since 2005, particularly as pertains to the legal rights of victims 
of gender-based violence (GBV).  Success stories are rare,, however, 
as perpetrators find it easy to literally escape the embryonic legal 
system somewhere between arrest, trial, conviction, and detention. 
The relationship with MONUC generally works well, though it is very 
personality driven and different between various offices in the 
East.  In Kinshasa MONUC Human Rights and UNHCR are working with the 
GDRC and UN Police (UNPOL) to establish a police protection force 
that will be able to address security concerns within and 
surrounding the IDP camps.  MONUC Human Rights, along with UNFPA and 
UNICEF, also runs the Joint Initiative on Sexual Violence to secure 
legal representation for GBV victims. 
 
8.  (SBU) With regards to early recovery, UNHCR's role is again 
limited to the provision of assistance to refugees, though it is 
prepared to do small-scale IDP returns as a confidence building 
measure.  IDP returns are generally the responsibility of UNICEF, 
which implements its Program of Expanded Assistance to Returns 
(PEAR) mechanism in providing assistance.  Early recovery (also 
called return and reintegration) is not officially a cluster but 
rather - as viewed by UNHCR - an umbrella term for activities that 
support the MONUC stabilization plan, including UNICEF-facilitated 
IDP returns.  Activities are co-managed by UNHCR and UNDP. 
Steinacker felt that given continued displacement a new profiling 
exercise should be conducted to allow better IDP returns planning. 
 
DRC - Rwanda Tripartite Talks 
----------------------------- 
 
9.  (SBU) Steinacker spoke briefly about the tripartite talks 
between the DRC and Rwanda.  (Note: this is a UNHCR-facilitated 
forum in which to discuss modalities for refugee returns between two 
countries.  It is not to be confused with the Tripartite Plus, which 
is a United States regional initiative to address peace and security 
issues that relate to the DRC, Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi.  End 
note.)  The first tripartite meeting took place in July in Kigali, 
the next will be in September in Goma.  Organizing the meeting was a 
challenge in itself, as the DRC and Rwanda do not have diplomatic 
relations.  The refugees in question are some 45,000 mainly Tutsi 
Congolese from the territories of Rutshuru and Masisi.  These claim 
to be eager to return, but security is not yet permissive to a 
UNHCR-sponsored repatriation exercise. 
 
10.  (SBU) One of the main sticking points in the tripartite talks 
is that of nationality.  Though the DRC constitution affirms the 
nationality of all residents of the Kivus -- including those whose 
ancestors settled from Rwanda during and after the colonial period 
-- there are still members of the GDRC who see the descendants of 
Rwandans immigrants as foreigners.  It also appears that there might 
be a fear of additional Rwandans being settled in the Kivus along 
with the refugees.  Therefore, the GDRC had recommended that tribal 
chiefs from North Kivu be asked to identify those who truly lived in 
the province before fleeing to Rwanda.  UNHCR is decidedly against 
this idea as it would put each individual's qualification for 
refugee status and Congolese citizenship in the hands of the chiefs. 
 The result could be Congolese refugees in Rwanda being declared 
non-citizens of the DRC and thereby becoming stateless people. 
 
Other Refugee Flows 
------------------- 
 
11.  (SBU) Meanwhile, there is a small number of UNHCR-facilitated 
returns happening in the opposite direction.  Through its 
partnership with MONUC's DDRRR program, UNHCR returns the families 
of demobilized FDLR soldiers.  One concern of UNHCR, however, is its 
desire to keep families together once repatriated.  Ex-combatants 
appear to be separated from their families on the Rwandan side of 
the border when they are put into reintegration camps.  Whether or 
not these ex-combatants are granted periodic access to their 
families during this time is unclear. 
 
12.  (SBU) There are also refugee returns from Uganda.  UNHCR had 
moved some 8,000 refugees to southern Uganda in late 2007 and early 
2008; some of these now appear to be returning spontaneously to 
parts of Ituri and Rutshuru territories.  The Congolese migration 
office will begin to register the returnees and UNHCR plans to start 
 
KINSHASA 00000683  003 OF 003 
 
 
providing assistance.  Because the returns are spontaneous, however, 
it is difficult to tell who is actually a refugee.  Few of the 
returnees have documentation to prove they were refugees in Uganda, 
claiming, for example, that they left their ration cards back in the 
camps in southern Uganda. 
 
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