Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Africa's peace seekers: Petronille Vaweka

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

September 14, 2005

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0914/p01s02-woaf.html

Africa's peace seekers: Petronille Vaweka

By Abraham McLaughlin | Staff writer of The Christian

Science Monitor

 

BUNIA, CONGO -- Out of the mist of a rural African morning,

a great lion springs into the path of a young woman walking

to work in the fields.

 

Tail twitching, the beast stares at her, ready to pounce.

 

But she knows better than to flinch. Moving slowly, she

bends her knees and places her iron hoe gently in the dirt.

 

Staring straight back, she begins talking to the lion. " I'm

not your enemy, " she says. " I'm only going to the field, and

I won't hurt you. "

 

The lion watches. The woman stands silently. Moments pass.

With a swish of his tail, the lion leaps away.

 

Petronille Vaweka, a top official ineastern Congo, grew up

hearing this story about her grandmother's courage. She

tells it today as a defining tale in her own life - a life

devoted to using the power of words to disarm the gun-toting

militias that stalk the villages in this lawless corner of

Africa.

 

" If you are facing someone who is violent, you must never

use force, " Ms. Vaweka recalls her grandmother saying. " The

first thing is to put down all your instruments. Then look

at them, right into the eye. "

 

* * *

 

The militia leader's conditions were clear: No large

contingent of bodyguards could come with her; no United

Nations peacekeepers. Vaweka, on a mission to free two

kidnapped government workers, would be allowed to negotiate

for their freedom accompanied only by her husband and a few

aides.

 

She agreed, despite the militia's menacing reputation. The

Patriotic Resistance Front of Ituri (FRPI in French, the

main language) is one of the groups implicated in the brutal

killing of nine Bangladeshi UN peacekeepers in a Feb. 25

ambush. FRPI leader Germain Katanga is now in prison

awaiting trial.

 

Vaweka knew this was her task, and hers alone. She's the top

official in the fledgling government of Ituri, a province

the size of West Virginia in a country as big as Alaska and

Texas combined. Ituri is one of Congo's richest regions -

and one of its most violent. It's chockablock with gold,

diamonds, oil, and coltan (a rare ore used in cellphones and

laptops). But the UN estimates that 60,000 people have died

here since 1999. Greedy outsiders -- including leaders in

neighboring Uganda and Rwanda -- have stoked ethnic tensions

and supplied the region's many militias with weapons to

fight for control of the riches.

 

In this case, the FRPI had snatched two of Vaweka's local

administrators from their offices in broad daylight. It was

a direct challenge to Vaweka's authority -- and her

government's efforts to establish control in this

long-chaotic region. She couldn't afford to have her

administrators locked up.

 

So on the steamy morning of July 17, Vaweka and her group

drove off into the bush. Twenty miles outside Bunia, Ituri's

capital, they were met by a half-dozen armed militia

members. Vaweka made sure to shake hands with each, looking

into their faces with her dark, penetrating eyes.

 

They were led to a ramshackle tin-roofed church. Everyone

left their guns at the door. But more soldiers were outside,

weapons ready. The FRPI, it seems, had called a kind of town

meeting, with about 600 local villagers present. Vaweka and

the militia leaders sat on a raised wooden platform.

Villagers sat in pews.

 

Given the delicacy of the situation, others might have

started gently. But Vaweka was soon scolding the audience

for tolerating the soldiers. " You've been taken hostage by

this militia, " she told them. " But you should be free,

because the militias are children, and there is no bigger

force than you, the people. "

 

To the militia she said frankly, " The administrators are

your servants. If you take them hostage, who will serve you?

And who will serve the people? "

 

Those who know Vaweka say one source of her strength is her

insistent truth-telling -- to diplomats, militia leaders,

anyone. " She's always respectful -- but always frank, " says

Anneke Van Woudenberg of Human Rights Watch in London, who

has worked in Ituri for years.

 

On the platform, militia leaders at first defended

themselves, complaining they'd been left out of the recent

integration of ex-militia into Congo's national Army, the

FARDC. As Congo's 1998-2003 war wound down, Vaweka and

others encouraged Ituri's militias to enter a UN-run

disarmament program. Some 15,000 have done so since Sept.

2004, the UN says. Many have joined FARDC ranks. But there

are still roughly 1,000 hard-core combatants in Ituri,

including the FRPI.

 

To the militia, Vaweka lectured: " If you're not in

communication with administrators " -- and instead take them

hostage -- " how can they help you " join the Army?

 

Soon, the FRPI leaders sat with heads bowed in shame, Vaweka

says. Finally, they offered her a hen and some Coke. It was

a sign of peace. She reciprocated with some juice she'd

brought as a kind of host gift. The mood lightened. A few

days later, the hostages were released unharmed.

 

* * *

 

Slowly by slowly, as some Africans say, peace is coming to

this part of Congo. Negotiation by negotiation, Vaweka chips

away at the assumption that force is the path to power.

Starting five years ago as a lowly civil-society worker --

and now as the province's top official -- her determination

to stand up for order, and for villagers, in a region where

militias have run roughshod for years, is helping to roll

back the rule of the gun.

 

" If anyone in Congo deserves a Nobel Prize, it's

Petronille, " says a diplomat in Kinshasa.

 

Just two years ago in Bunia, armed groups were besieging the

UN headquarters and killing people in the streets. These

days, gunshots no longer ring out, and residents can walk

around town at night. New businesses, including an Internet

cafe and an Indian restaurant, have opened recently.

 

To be sure, the UN is a major factor. It got aggressive in

the wake of the nine peacekeepers' deaths. It fights

hold-out militias with helicopter gunships,

armored-personnel carriers, and heavy weaponry. But

observers say Vaweka's role is central, too.

 

" The armed groups complain bitterly about her, " mostly

because she confronts them, says Ms. Van Woudenberg. " But

everyone knows if she wasn't there, there would be massive

problems. "

 

Over the years, she's held countless negotiating sessions

with militias -- cajoling, lecturing, and pushing them

toward peace. " I won't undertake something unless I know

I'll succeed, " she says.

 

Yet she pays a personal price. Long ago, she sent her older

children away from Ituri for their safety -- and keeps a

close eye on her younger, adopted children, one of whom is a

former child soldier. Death threats are a daily occurrence.

 

And complete peace in Vaweka's region and nation remains

elusive. She wishes her grandmother were still around to

advise and inspire. " I think about her, " Vaweka says, " every

day. "

 

* * *

 

On a December day in 1996, Vaweka said a casual goodbye to

her husband, Paul Ciongo. He'd be gone only a few days -- to

sell a load of dried fish in a nearby city.

 

But neither husband nor wife knew what lay ahead -- for them

or their country. A conflagration that would take millions

of lives and separate so many loved ones was just over the

horizon.

 

Rebel leader Laurent Kabila was threatening to overthrow

US-backed President Mobutu Sese Seko. But Mr. Mobutu had

sent elite troops east to crush the rebels. So Mr. Ciongo

wasn't worried as he set off. Yet two days later, rebels

overran Bunia. Ciongo and Vaweka were suddenly on opposite

sides of the front. Neither knew if the other was still

alive, because the rebels cut communication lines.

 

Kabila's rebels advanced fast, pushing Ciongo and many

others 1,200 miles westward to Kinshasa in just four months.

Mr. Mobutu's rotting regime crumbled. The billionaire tyrant

fled for Morocco.

 

That was the beginning of Congo's most-turbulent period

since independence from Belgium in 1960. By 1998, a

full-scale war erupted, drawing troops in from seven nations

intent on exploiting Congo's resources. During the five-year

war, up to four million people died, mostly from hunger and

disease. So many nations and militias were involved that

it's called " Africa's world war. "

 

As the conflict raged, Ciongo tried to call Vaweka month

after month. Finally after about a year, they briefly spoke

by phone. At least each knew the other was alive -- even if

they were to spend years separated by war.

 

* * *

 

It took only a few weeks for Vaweka's new bosses at Oxfam to

realize she was completely overqualified for her job. In

2000, she took a low-level position as a hygiene promoter.

Her husband had been gone for three years, and the income

was welcome.

 

But the job also fit with the basic ethic she'd been taught

since childhood. " I grew up in the culture of protection --

of protecting others, " she says.

 

When she was little, her father, a wealthy merchant, gave

lots of money to the church, she says, and paid for several

new schools to be built. " In our ethnic group, one has to

live for others -- a mother lives for her husband and the

family, and we all live for the community. "

 

So, for Oxfam, the British relief group, she began

journeying deep into the bush, talking to women about

purifying water and other health basics. It meant going into

areas notorious for rape, torture, even cannibalism. But

this didn't faze her. In fact, she began seeking out leaders

of militias perpetrating these atrocities -- to understand

why they were so intent on violence.

 

" We quickly recognized she came with extraordinary

qualities, " recalls Van Woudenberg, who then worked for

Oxfam -- and helped Vaweka start her own non-profit group,

the Foundation for Lasting Peace.

 

Then, as a full-time peace seeker, Vaweka helped organize

meetings between militia leaders and chiefs -- and began to

build momentum toward ending the fighting. " Her star was

rising, " Van Woudenberg says.

 

By April 2003, Congo was emerging from its war. When Ituri's

militias struck a peace deal, they sought a president for

the region's new interim government. No one else had so much

street-level credibility. Vaweka was appointed to the job.

 

* * *

 

Hundreds of miles away, meanwhile, in the forests outside

Kinshasa, Ciongo had taken up lumberjacking. To stave off

loneliness in the forest, he bought a small radio.

 

One night in April 2003, the airwaves carried news of a

delegation in Kinshasa. One of its members was Ituri

President Petronille Vaweka.

 

Could it be? When he had left, she was a lowly water-project

worker. Now she was president of Ituri?

 

Before dawn the next day, he raced to Kinshasa, guessing

which hotel she was staying at.

 

" Is Petronille Vaweka here? " he gasped at the front-desk

clerk, still out of breath.

 

" Yes sir, but it's 6 a.m., so you must wait. "

 

" But this is my wife. I haven't seen her .... " He recounted

their saga.

 

The clerk let him phone her room.

 

" Who is this? Who is this? " Vaweka kept saying, too groggy

to understand.

 

Moments later, they embraced for the first time in seven years.

 

* * *

 

Abraham Lincoln. Billy Graham. Even the despot Mobutu.

 

In a region overflowing with guns, Vaweka is fascinated by

these men -- and anyone else who understands the enormous

power of the spoken word. " I come from a culture where words

have power, " she explains.

 

She says she grew up seeing adults in her village cast

spells. " If you wish some bad fate on someone, what you say

can have an impact, " she says. And for decades, Mobutu held

great sway, in part because of his powerful words: " He had

the force of words -- and dominated this country. " Just like

her grandmother, who survived the lion encounter by putting

down her hoe, Vaweka says, " I don't seek the force of guns,

but the force of words. "

 

And her words persuaded many local militia leaders to put

down their weapons. " In many ways, she got the

demobilization process off the ground as a concept, " says a

Western diplomat in Kinshasa.

 

Her pitch to militia chiefs was simple. They had three

self-interested reasons to disarm: It would boost their

legitimacy, help their soldiers have better lives, and

improve their popularity with locals, which could help in

upcoming elections. The argument largely worked. With some

15,000 militia members having started demobilization, the

province is as calm as it's been in years.

 

Yet Vaweka is hardly a pacifist at any price. There's a

great need, she says, for the national Army -- as the

legitimate repository for Ituri's guns. And she supports the

UN in its new aggressive stance toward militias. " At some

point we had to face [with force] the people who wouldn't

listen -- the people who think weapons are power, " she says.

 

For now, she plays a kind of " good cop " to the UN's " bad

cop. " She meets with militias -- including the FRPI -- and

encourages them to cooperate with authorities and lay down

their weapons. The UN goes after those that don't.

 

But ultimately, she says, the UN and its guns can't solve

Ituri's problems: " No outside force can help Iturians if

they can't understand they must not use weapons. "

 

* * *

 

The burned-out hulk of a one-story building, with its

collapsed tin roof and strewn-about bricks, says everything

about the central challenge Vaweka now faces.

 

It's the sweltering morning of Aug. 5, 2005, and Vaweka has

just landed in the northern Ituri town of Aru in a giant UN

helicopter. Now she's standing in front of the charred

building. Until two days ago, this was the government's main

office in town. Then it went up in flames. There's little

doubt it was arson.

 

As she walks closer to the building, she passes an honor

guard of ex-militia men, who've joined the new Army. With

rifles slung over their shoulders, they salute Vaweka. Their

commander grasps what's supposed to be a ceremonial sword --

but is merely a long piece of wood, wrapped in tinfoil. What

might be comical under other circumstances is an earnest

attempt at normalcy here.

 

With fighting on the decline, the Kinshasa-based national

government is trying to establish order in long-lawless

Ituri -- to collect taxes, administer services, and more.

But the militias who have been in charge consider that a

threat -- and see Vaweka, the government's local leader, as

the source of their troubles.

 

Inside the building's ash-filled file room Vaweka walks past

destroyed records of militia atrocities around Aru. It will

be much harder to punish or prosecute with those records

gone. Also incinerated were voter records for national

elections that the government, with UN help, is organizing

for next year.

 

Even Ituri's antagonistic Hema and Lendu ethnic militias --

who have fought each other viciously for years -- are

uniting against their new common enemy, the Kinshasa

government. The remaining armed groups " are doing their best

to stop her, " says Joel Bisubu of the Bunia-based advocacy

group Justice Plus. They accuse her of being a puppet of the

Kinshasa government -- and of being a politician, not a

peacemaker.

 

Back in the UN helicopter, on the flight from Aru to Bunia,

Vaweka seems unperturbed by all the challenges. Of the

apparent arson she says simply, " Nobody died, so it's not so

bad. " She asked Aru officials to draw up plans for the

building's reconstruction.

 

Of her role as a politician, she says, with a piercing look

that might make her grandmother proud, " Some people say what

I'm doing now is politics, but I say it's what I've always

been doing: Trying to protect the people. "

 

Petronille Vaweka

 

1948 Born in Ituri Province of then-Belgian Congo

1979 Widowed, then married Paul Ciongo, her son's guitar teacher

2000 Worked for Oxfam as hygiene promoter

2000 Started Foundation for Everlasting Peace

2003 Appointed President of Ituri interim assembly

2004 Appointed Ituri District Commissioner

 

A musical family

 

The Ciongo-Vawekas recorded a 3-song CD entitled

" Mekadishkem " or " God Who Makes us Holy. "

 

 

I am only one, but still I am one. I cannot do everything, but I can still do

something; and because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do the

something that I can do.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...