Original HRC document

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Document Type: Final Report

Date: 2015 Aug

Session: 30th Regular Session (2015 Sep)

Agenda Item:

United Nations A/HRC/30/33

General Assembly Distr.: General 24 August 2015

English Original: French

GE.15-14279 (E) 170915 180915

*1514279*

Human Rights Council Thirtieth session

Agenda items 2 and 10

Annual report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

and reports of the Office of the High Commissioner and the Secretary-General

Technical assistance and capacity-building

Study on the impact of technical assistance and capacity- building on the human rights situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (2008-2014)

Report of the United Nations

Summary

The present study is submitted pursuant to Human Rights Council resolution

A/HRC/RES/27/27 of 26 September 2014, in which the Office of the United Nations

High Commissioner for Human Rights was requested to “commission a study on the

impact of technical assistance and capacity-building on the human rights situation in

the Democratic Republic of the Congo and to submit the report at its thirtieth session

within the framework of an interactive dialogue”. It is based on activities conducted

throughout the country between 2008 and the end of 2014 by the United Nations and

international NGOs, with the support of Member States.

During the period under consideration, the technical assistance provided by the

international community made it possible to achieve significant legislative and

institutional progress and improved conduct on the part of duty bearers and rights

holders.

The country’s legal framework has evolved, notably with the adoption in 2013 of

an Institutional Act giving courts of appeal jurisdiction over crimes of genocide, war

crimes and crimes against humanity.

Institutional developments in the area of human rights include the establishment

of the human rights liaison entity and the Human Rights Defenders Protection Unit.

The National Human Rights Commission was set up in 2013 and its members were

appointed in 2015.

The fact that victims of sexual violence have gradually become aware of their

need for justice and assistance has helped to combat impunity for crimes under

international law and sexual and gender-based violence committed by senior officers

of the defence and security forces and by armed groups. A growing number of

members of those forces and groups have been found guilty of massacres, sexual

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violence and looting, and have been given sentences including life imprisonment.

Capacity-building for the defence and security forces and civil society, together

with increased monitoring of human rights by civil society and the United Nations, the

publication of reports, advocacy and the above-mentioned sentences have all helped to

raise the authorities’ awareness of their duties and to reduce the number of human

rights violations.

The protection mechanisms set up in areas subject to armed attack in the east of

the country have helped provide better protection for the civilian population.

Despite the positive impact of the technical assistance provided by the

international community in the area of human rights, many problems remain. Impunity

is still a major concern. Remaining challenges related to the legal framework include

the fact that important legislation aimed at protecting human rights, and specifically

concerning human rights defenders, sex equality and gender, has not yet been adopted.

There are conflicts of mandate between institutions, for instance, between the

National Human Rights Commission and the human rights liaison entity, and there is

still no national mechanism for the prevention of torture, despite the fact that the

Democratic Republic of the Congo is a party to the Optional Protocol to the

Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or

Punishment.

Most interventions by the international community have concentrated on the east

of the country and have generally been short-term, which has not helped to produce

sustainable outcomes.

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Contents Page

Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

I. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

II. Scope of the study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

III. Methodology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

IV. Main interventions by the international community . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

A. Support for the administration of justice in combating impunity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

B. Strengthening the national system for protection of human rights and collaboration with

the international human rights mechanisms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

C. Protection of civilians in armed conflict . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

D. Economic and social rights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

V. Gender mainstreaming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

VI. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

VII. Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

A. To the Government . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

B. To the United Nations Joint Human Rights Office and the United Nations

country team . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

C. To the international community . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

GE.15-14279 4/19

Abbreviations

FARDC Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo

GPRSP Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper

MONUSCO United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the

Democratic Republic of the Congo

NGO non-governmental organization

OCHA Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

OHCHR Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human

Rights

OSISA Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa

UNDAF United Nations Development Assistance Framework

UNDP United Nations Development Programme

UNFPA United Nations Population Fund

UNHCR Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

UNICEF United Nations Children’s Fund

UNJHRO United Nations Joint Human Rights Office

UN-Women United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the

Empowerment of Women

UPR universal periodic review

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I. Introduction

1. The Human Rights Council, in resolution A/HRC/RES/27/27 of 26 September

2014, called upon the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human

Rights (OHCHR) to commission a study on the impact of technical assistance and

capacity-building on the human rights situation in the Democratic Republic of the

Congo.

2. Based on a review of the action taken by the United Nations and international

non-governmental organizations (NGOs) with respect to the promotion and protection

of human rights, the study evaluates the progress achieved as a result of these

activities, as well as its limits with regard to the human rights situation in the

Democratic Republic of the Congo. It covers the period from 2008 to 2014, with the

beginning of the year 2008 marking the start of the first United Nations Development

Assistance Framework (UNDAF) with a post-crisis perspective after the presidential

election of 2006.

3. The study aims to measure the following elements:

 The relevance of action taken by the international community with respect to

human rights;

 The effectiveness of such action in terms of results;

 The impact of technical assistance on the enjoyment of human rights;

 The inclusion of gender mainstreaming in all areas.

II. Scope of the study

4. The study takes into account the 2008-2012 cycle and half of the 2013-2017

cycle of UNDAF, the country programmes of the different specialized institutions of

the United Nations and those of international NGOs.

5. It should be noted that UNDAF is aligned to the Government’s priorities with

respect to governance and human rights as outlined in the national Growth and

Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (GPRSP).

6. The priorities with respect to human rights, which are set out in the 2006 and the

2011-2015 GPRSPs, are the following: improving the legal framework and access to

justice; training magistrates and court officers and creating a national judicial training

college; establishing an institution for the coordination of human rights affairs;

disseminating human rights conventions; improving conditions of detention;

improving the protection of vulnerable groups; and ensuring better management and

development of natural resources.

7. Four main themes emerge from the programme documents of some stakeholders

and from meetings with them and with the national authorities; they group the main

aspects of work related to human rights in the country:

 Supporting the administration of justice in order to combat impunity;

 Strengthening the national system for the protection of human rights and

collaboration with international human rights mechanisms;

 Protecting civilians in armed conflict;

 Promoting economic and social rights.

GE.15-14279 6/19

III. Methodology

8. The study was carried out over three months by an OHCHR staff member

deployed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, with institutional support provided

by a reference group composed of OHCHR, the United Nations Joint Human Rights

Office (UNJHRO) 1 and the United Nations Integrated Office in the Democratic

Republic of the Congo.

9. The study is based on the following methodology:

 Inspection of various documents (in particular studies, reports, legislation and

programme documents);

 Discussions with members of local civil society to gain an understanding of how

they interpret the action taken by international organizations;

 Submission of questionnaires to the principal actors from the United Nations,

government authorities and international NGOs in Kinshasa and the provinces;

 E-mail exchanges with stakeholders that are not resident in the Democratic

Republic of the Congo;

 Observer missions to Bas-Congo (Mbanza-Ngungu, Kimbemba and Lamba) on

income-generating activities and assistance to returned migrants; to Katanga

(Kalemie and Lubumbashi) on governance with respect to the exploitation of

natural resources and the protection of indigenous populations; to North Kivu

(Goma) on protection of civilians, combating sexual violence and care for

children demobilized by armed groups and victims of sexual violence; and to

South Kivu (Bukavu) on holistic care for victims of sexual violence. Visits were

made to the legal clinic at Mungunga, the War Child UK helpline centre in North

Kivu and the Panzi Foundation in South Kivu.

10. The following difficulties were encountered in conducting the study:

 Lack of responses to requests for meetings and to questionnaires from some key

focal points;

 Unavailability of documentation and of comprehensive detailed data on the

action taken by the international community throughout the period under

consideration;

 Lack of institutional memory because of certain international actors having

moved elsewhere;

 Inaccessibility of some locations in the west of the country (Equateur, Manie ma,

Kasaï) due to the halt in air traffic following the gradual withdrawal of the

United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic

of the Congo (MONUSCO);

 The relatively short length of time allocated to carry out the study.

IV. Main interventions by the international community

11. Since 1996, the Democratic Republic of the Congo has suffered a series of wars

that have caused political instability and insecurity, economic failure and a

__________________

1 UNJHRO was established in 2008 following the merger of the OHCHR office in the Democratic

Republic of the Congo (created in 1996) and the human rights component of the United Nations

Organization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

7/19 GE.15-14279

considerable delay in the country’s development. This situation has led to chronic

humanitarian crises and grave violations of human rights, in particular sexual and

gender-based violence.

12. In response, the international community has taken significant measures in the

field of human rights. These have involved numerous international NGOs,

MONUSCO, whose human rights mandate is implemented by UNJHRO, and the

United Nations Programme Management Team (PMT).2

A. Support for the administration of justice in combating impunity

13. The political instability and insecurity in the country led to serious crimes and

mass violations of human rights by defence and security forces and by armed groups.

They included extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, sexual and gender -based

violence, property crime and forced labour.

14. In the absence of comprehensive data on the period under consideration, the

chart below shows the evolution of human rights violations and the number of victims

of those violations between 2011 and 2014.

Source: Data from UNJHRO.

15. The above chart shows a slight decrease in the number of cases of human rights

violations during the period in question but a marked increase in the number of

victims. In total, 21,940 victims were recorded by UNJHRO between 2011 and 2014,

of whom 14,851 were men, 4,149 were women and 2,940 were children. Victims of

sexual violence were among the victims for whom comprehensive care was provided.

1. Holistic care for victims of sexual and gender-based violence

16. In 2008, in her report on the promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,

political, economic, social and cultural, including the right to development

(A/HRC/7/6/Add.4), the Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes

and consequences, noted that survivors of rape in the Democratic Republic of the

Congo lacked appropriate care and were denied the compensation to which they were

entitled under international and Congolese law.

__________________

2 The Programme Management Team is composed of approximately 20 entities — funds, programmes

and resident and non-resident agencies.

0

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

2011 2012 2013 2014

Chart 1: Evolution of human rights violations and

victims

Violations des droits de l'homme

Victimes

Human rights violations

Victims

GE.15-14279 8/19

17. The combined efforts of the American Bar Association, Avocats sans frontières,

UNJHRO, Cordaid, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the United

Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the International Center for Transitional Justice,

UN-Women, the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa (OSISA), Physicians for

Human Rights, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and Track

Impunity Always (Trial), supported by a number of Member States, enabled 89

itinerant hearings to be organized by military and civil courts in the provinces of Bas -

Congo, Equateur, Kasaï-oriental, Katanga, North Kivu, Orientale, South Kivu and

Kinshasa between 2008 and 2014. The advocacy efforts of the international

community with respect to combating impunity for sexual violence were reinforced by

the mandates of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual

Violence in Conflict and the Team of Experts on the Rule of Law and Sexual Violence

in Conflict.

18. In 2013, UNJHRO provided legal assistance free of charge to 1,507 victims of

sexual violence in 12 legal clinics and 25 legal aid centres (throughout the country

apart from Orientale province), with funding from the Canadian International

Development Agency, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency,

Belgium, Brazil and UK Aid.

19. According to figures from MONUSCO, there was a gradual increase in the

number of judgements issued with respect to sexual violence in comparison with the

total number of judgements issued by national courts between 2009 and 2014: from 14

per cent (2009/2010), to 17 per cent (2010/2011), 22 per cent (2011/2012), 25 per cent

(2012/2013) and 23 per cent (2013/2014).

20. During the period in question, around 33,057 victims 3 of sexual violence

benefited from holistic care comprising legal, medical, psychosocial and social and

economic assistance provided by UNJHRO, UN-Women, OSISA, UNFPA and

UNICEF, often through local NGOs. In 2010, following work by the Panel on

Remedies and Reparations for Victims of Sexual Violence in the Democratic Republic

of the Congo, UNJHRO and UNFPA provided joint social and economic assistance to

30 women who were victims of sexual violence in Songo -Mboyo (Equateur province).

At their request, they were given a boat for transporting fish so that they could sell

their merchandise, together with training in managing it. Thanks to the advocacy of

the international community, in 2014 for the first time, the Government of the

Democratic Republic of the Congo granted reparations to 30 victims from Songo -

Mboyo.4

2. Strengthening the administration of justice

21. In 2006, the Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper diagnosed the

judicial system as being ineffective and resulting in individuals resorting to

extrajudicial conflict resolution procedures, court decisions not being enforced and

people harbouring a deep mistrust in the justice system.

22. In his report of 2008 on the promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,

political, economic, social and cultural, including the right to development

(A/HRC/8/4/Add.2), the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and

lawyers noted that there was no judicial training college, nor any adequate training for

judges, which meant that their judgements were unreliable. He recommended

__________________

3 Data gathered from MONUSCO performance reports from 2009 to 2014.

4 In December 2003, FARDC soldiers committed mass rapes of women and girls in Songo -Mboyo.

The final rulings on appeal were handed down in 2007 by the military tribunal in the garrison of

Mbandaka sitting in itinerant hearing at Songo-Mboyo.

9/19 GE.15-14279

strengthening the training of judges and court officers with respect to ethics,

professional conduct and international human rights standards.

23. Between 2008 and 2014, international stakeholders trained more than 25,000

court and prison personnel (civilian and military), of whom approximately 10 per cent

were women, in all the country’s provinces on the legal processes regarding crimes

under international law, sexual violence and other human rights violatio ns, forensic

examination, combating torture and management of cases concerning children in

conflict with the law.

24. The lack of coordination between the various international stakeholders and

between them and the Government, the absence of any sectoral policy or strategic plan

with respect to human rights as well as the lack of a judicial training college have led

to a duplication of capacity-building activities for staff of the justice system. Thus,

some of them have followed a number of similar training sessions organized by

different partners.

25. Between 2008 and 2014, the international community provided support in trials

brought for crimes under international law and grave human rights violations by

protecting and caring for victims, witnesses and their lawyers and facilitating the

travel of judicial personnel. As a result of those trials, 582 members of the Armed

Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (FARDC) and 367 members of the

national police force 5 were sentenced to between 3 and 20 years in prison. In

accordance with the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, the justice

system sentenced commanders and other senior officers of the defence and security

forces and members of armed groups, marking an important step in the fight against

impunity. Among these emblematic cases were the following:

 On 15 December 2014, the military court of South Kivu sentenced Colonel

Engangela, also known as “colonel 106”, to rigorous imprisonment for life and

20 years of penal servitude for crimes against humanity, torture, kidnapping and

sexual slavery committed against approximately 1,200 victims in South Kivu

between 2005 and 2007;

 On 9 August 2010, the military tribunal of the garrison of Bunia sentenced

Bernard Kakodo, commander of the Forces de résistance patriotiques en Ituri

armed group, to life imprisonment for crimes against humanity following mass

killings of civilians, rape, slavery and pillage in Bunia (Orientale province) in

2002;

 On 4 June 2009, the military tribunal of the garrison of Kisangani sentenced

Colonel Thom’s, commander of the Maï-Maï militia group, to life imprisonment

for crimes against humanity against approximately 135 women, of whom 8 were

minors, in the village of Lieke Lesole, close to Kisangani (Orientale province),

in 2007.

3. Capacity-building for the defence and security forces

26. In 2008, the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers

expressed concern that 86 per cent of human rights violations in the Democratic

Republic of the Congo were committed by police or military personnel.

27. In a bid to remedy that situation, UNJHRO assisted the Ministry of Justice and

Human Rights, notably in implementing a national judicial framework with respect to

detention. Between 2013 and 2014, UNJHRO and the Ministry visited national police

detention facilities and prisons throughout the country. The advocacy of UNJHRO

following these visits resulted in the release of 1,177 detainees for procedural __________________

5 UNJHRO database, 2011-2014.

GE.15-14279 10/19

irregularities and illegal detention. In addition, with the assistance of UNJHRO, 17

senior law enforcement officers were arrested and 5 were removed from the national

police force for serious human rights violations. Two illegal detention centres in

Kinshasa and Kisangani were also closed in 2014.

28. From 2008 to 2014, in all provinces in the country, UNJHRO, MONUSCO and

UNFPA trained around 421,856 members of FARDC, the national police force and the

national intelligence agency in combating sexual violence and promoting respect for

human rights and international humanitarian law. Together with UNICEF, they

designed training modules on combating sexual violence and on international

humanitarian law, which were added to the training programme of the national police

force and FARDC.

29. The chart below shows a decrease in the number of human rights violations

between 2011 and 2014, with 53 per cent of violations committed by members of

FARDC or the national police force in 2014. This reduction can be attributed to the

training they received and the trials of perpetrators of human rights violations. The

peaks observed in 2012 are explained by a resurgence in the activities of armed groups

in the east of the country.

Source: UNJHRO data.

30. Under the coordination of UNFPA, several partners such as UNJHRO, Heal

Africa, the International Rescue Committee, Magna Enfants en Péril and UNICEF,

with the support of Member States, created and subsequently handed to the

Government (Ministry for Gender, the Family and Children) a database on acts of

sexual violence committed between 2010 and 2014. The aim of this official database is

to map and coordinate action by the international community in nine provinces. A

major obstacle to updating the database is the reticence of certain partners to share

information which they consider belongs to them.

31. Since 2012, UNJHRO has assisted the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights in

consolidating the data on sentences handed out by national courts in cases of sexual

violence. The assistance has consisted in developing tools for data collection, for data

analysis and for the production of statistical reports. UNJHRO has placed material

resources at the disposal of the Ministry and has assigned an expert to the Ministry to

manage the database. Other actors from the United Nations, international NGOs and

UNJHRO are finding it difficult to coordinate their efforts to provide similar

0 200 400 600 800

1000 1200 1400 1600

N u

m b

e r

o f

vi o

la ti

o n

s

Types of perpetrator

Chart 2: Perpetrators of human rights violations

2011

2012

2013

2014

F A

R D

C

P N

C

(C o

n g

o le

s e

p o

li c e

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)

A N

R

A u

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11/19 GE.15-14279

assistance to the Ministry. Improved coordination of the various interventions by the

Ministry of Justice and Human Rights should produce a more positive outcome to this

situation.

B. Strengthening the national system for protection of human rights and collaboration with the international human rights mechanisms

1. Ratification of international and regional conventions

32. As a result of the advocacy of international actors during the period in question,

the Democratic Republic of the Congo has acceded to new international and regional

human rights instruments:

 The Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights

of Women in Africa (in June 2008), the African Charter on Democracy, Elections

and Governance (in June 2008) and the African Charter on the Rights and

Welfare of the Child (in February 2014);

 The Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel,

Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (in September 2010);

 An act authorizing the ratification of the Convention on the Rights of Persons

with Disabilities was voted on in 2013 and the ratification process is currently

under way.

33. To date, the Democratic Republic of the Congo has still not become a party to

the following instruments:

 The International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant

Workers and Members of Their Families;

 The International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced

Disappearance;

 The Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and

Political Rights, aiming at the abolition of the death penalty;

 The Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and

Cultural Rights;

 The Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of

Discrimination against Women;

 The Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on a

communications procedure.

2. Submission of reports to the human rights treaty bodies and the universal periodic

review and collaboration with the special procedures of the United Nations

34. In the report on her mission to the Democratic Republic of the Congo

(A/HRC/13/22/Add.2) in 2009, the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human

rights defenders recommended that the drafting methodology of the Interministerial

Technical Committee on the drafting and follow-up to initial and periodic human

rights reports should be improved to enable it to meet reporting obligations in a timely

manner.

35. Between 2011 and 2012, the combined periodic reports to the Committee on the

Rights of the Child, the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against

Women and the Human Rights Committee were submitted with assistance received by

the Interministerial Technical Committee from UNJHRO, UNPD and UNICEF.

GE.15-14279 12/19

36. Reports remain to be submitted to the Committee against Torture (due in 2009),

the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (due in 2011) and the

Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (due in 2013).

37. In the framework of the country’s participation in the universal periodic review

(UPR) in 2009 and 2014, UNJHRO provided technical and financial assistance to the

Interministerial Technical Committee to facilitate the submission of the State party

reports. At the end of the second UPR cycle, the Government accepted 190

recommendations and took note of 39 others. 6 The support of UNJHRO made it

possible to draft a plan for implementation of the recommendations, including with the

help of funding from the Voluntary Fund for Financial and Technical Assistance.

38. During the period under consideration, the Democratic Republic of the Congo

received 5 visits from special procedures 7 in addition to 11 visits recorded before

2008. OHCHR provided the necessary support for the organization of these visits.

39. Civil society organizations submitted alternative reports to the Committee on the

Rights of the Child, the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against

Women and the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights and to the UPR in

2014. Technical and financial assistance from UNJHRO, the Carter Center and the

Centre for Civil and Political Rights in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

contributed to the development of plans for implementation of the reco mmendations

formulated by the above-mentioned bodies.

3. Legal and institutional framework

40. The 2009 report on the mission of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of

human rights defenders highlights some shortcomings in the Congolese legal system,

in particular the absence of laws protecting human rights defenders, limiting the

jurisdiction of military courts to offences committed by members of the armed forces

and the national police, in accordance with article 156 of the 2006 Constitution, and

protecting victims and witnesses, in application of article 68 of the Rome Statute,

which was ratified by the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2002.

41. With the advocacy and technical assistance of the international community, the

Government adopted important legislation and regulations, including Institutional Act

No. 13/011B of 11 April 2013, on the organization, functioning and competence of the

ordinary courts, which gives courts of appeal jurisdiction over crimes of genocide, war

crimes and crimes against humanity, and Institutional Act No. 13/011 concerning the

establishment, organization and operation of the National Human Rights Commission,

adopted in 2013 in accordance with the Paris Principles. 8 Other laws were passed on

establishing a juvenile justice system and recognizing torture as a crime. However,

further efforts are required to achieve the adoption of more legislation, including on

the protection of victims, witnesses and human rights defenders.

__________________

6 The recommendations noted related in particular to the abolition of the death penalty, the passing of

laws on protection of human rights defenders and accession to some instruments that had not yet

been ratified.

7 The Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions (2009); the Special

Rapporteur on the human rights of internally displaced persons (2008, 2009); the Special

Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders (2009); the Independent Expert on the effects

of foreign debt and other related international financial obligations of States on the full enjoyment

of all human rights, particularly economic, social and cultural rights (2011).

8 Principles relating to the status of national institutions for the promotion and protection of human

rights approved by the General Assembly (resolution A/RES/48/134) on 20 December 1993. The

members of the national human rights commission appointed in April 2015 were sworn in in July

2015.

13/19 GE.15-14279

42. The human rights liaison entity, established in 2009 and composed of national

experts, UNJHRO and some international and local NGOs, is tasked with proposing

the necessary guidance for the effective protection of human rights, ensuring the

monitoring and implementation of the national plan for the promotion and protection

of human rights and overseeing the drafting of initial and periodic reports on human

rights. The human rights liaison entity has not been in operation since it was

established although some members were appointed in 2010 and 2012. There is a

conflict of jurisdiction between the human rights liaison entity and some aspects of the

National Human Rights Commission, in particular with regard to examination of

issues giving rise to human rights violations and proposals for solutions, as well as

evaluation of national activities in the human rights sphere. This situation could create

competition between the two institutions, in particular with respect to funding. The

same is true for the National Commission for Preparation of and Follo w-up to the

Universal Periodic Review and the Interministerial Technical Committee, both of

which are responsible for the submission of reports to the human rights mechanisms

and for follow-up to their recommendations. Given that the National Commission has

never been fully operational, its functions could be integrated into those of the

Interministerial Technical Committee.

43. Technical assistance provided by Avocats sans Frontières, UNJHRO, Human

Rights Watch and OSISA resulted in the adoption in 2011 of a ministerial decree

establishing a unit for the protection of human rights defenders. This unit has

difficulty in operating due to lack of adequate resources. In addition, the absence of

legislation on the protection of human rights defenders is a barrier to their legal

protection.

C. Protection of civilians in armed conflict

44. The activities of armed groups in the east of the country are a major threat to the

protection of civilians and have resulted in numerous human rights violations and

large-scale displacements of populations. Armed groups seeking to extend their

influence and their control to rich territories do not hesitate to attack civilian

populations. In addition, in the context of operations against these armed groups,

members of the Congolese defence and security forces sometimes commit violations

of human rights and international humanitarian law.

1. Protection of civilians

45. The security of people and their possessions has remained a concern in conflict

zones and in zones recovering from conflict. In response to these challenges, the

international community has contributed to the implementation of mechanisms for the

protection of civilians in the east of the country:

 UNJHRO, in collaboration with MONUSCO, established approximately 312

joint protection teams to prevent attacks on civilians in the east of the country

between 2009 and 2014. These teams have drawn up plans for protection in

different locations and have conducted 117,019 joint patrols;

 Between 2013 and 2014, MONUSCO’s Civil Affairs Section and UNJHRO

supported several communities in developing more than 49 community civilian

protection plans. During this period, MONSUCO’s Civil Affairs Section

deployed 40 community liaison assistants throughout the communities

concerned;

 During the period in question, MONUSCO, Catholic Relief Services and Caritas

provided more than 900 mobile telephones and restored high frequency radio

GE.15-14279 14/19

communications networks in the provinces of Equateur, Katanga, North Kivu,

Orientale and South Kivu. As a result of that assistance, FARDC and

MONUSCO were able to take action to protect civilians;

 Between 2011 and 2012, UNJHRO established 93 MONUSCO early warning,

analysis and rapid response units, which received 1,890 early warnings relating

to threats of armed attacks against civilian populations.

46. Despite the results recorded and the adoption, in 2013, by humanitarian actors of

a directive on civilian and military coordination concerning information sharing and

the wider strategy of the United Nations for the protection of civilians, shortcomings

persist in coordination between the humanitarian actors, UNJHRO and MONUSCO

forces on information sharing and the prevention of risks of armed attacks on

civilians. Some members of working groups on protection are reluctant to share

information as a result of their strict interpretation of humanitarian principles

(neutrality and impartiality) since the integration with MONUSCO, in 2013, of the

Intervention Brigade, when it was given a mandate to fight in response to imminent

attacks upon civilians.

2. Protection of children

47. On 4 October 2012, the Government and the special team of the United Nations

for the protection of children in armed conflict signed an action plan to combat the

recruitment and use of children in armed forces and armed groups, in accordance with

Security Council resolutions 1539 (2004), 1612 (2005), 1882 (2009) and 1998 (2011).

An interministerial committee and a joint technical working group, comprising the

Government and specialized agencies of the United Nations, 9 were set up to

implement the action plan. The MONUSCO Child Protection Section coordinates the

joint technical working group and identifies and removes children from armed groups.

48. According to report A/69/926-S/2015/409 (2015) on children and armed conflict

of the Secretary-General to the Security Council, at least 1,030 children (973 boys and

57 girls) were removed from armed groups in the provinces of Orientale and North

and South Kivu in 2014.

49. UNICEF and its partners provided comprehensive care to 863 child victims of

sexual violence in 2014.

50. Between 2012 and 2014, War Child UK supported the creation and transfer to the

Ministry of Gender, Family and Children of a helpline covering the provinces of North

and South Kivu and Kinshasa. This centre responds to children who have been

demobilized from armed groups or who are victims of sexual violence. Between 2013

and 2014, social workers from the provincial division of social affairs in North Kivu

received and processed 10,945 calls. In March 2015, the special representative of the

Head of State tasked with combating sexual violence and the recruitment of child

soldiers launched a similar initiative at the national level. It is important to ensure the

complementarity of these two mechanisms in order to better coordinate assistance to

the children concerned.

3. Protection of internally displaced persons and returnees

51. According to the Office for the Coordination of Humanita rian Affairs (OCHA),

approximately 2.7 million persons were displaced in the territory of the Democratic

Republic of the Congo and 1.4 million returnees were registered in 2014. 10

__________________

9 The International Labour Organization, UNHCR, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian

Affairs, UNICEF and the MONUSCO Child Protection Section.

10

OCHA, Republic of Congo, Humanitarian perspective (November 2014).

15/19 GE.15-14279

52. The resolution of land disputes relating to the return of displaced perso ns to their

places of origin led the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

(UNHCR) to support local dispute resolution committees, 700 of which have been set

up in the east of the country. Between 2013 and 2014, approximately 70 per cent of

land disputes were resolved, 20 per cent were referred to the law courts and 10 per

cent were not resolved.

53. Between October 2010 and January 2014, in the province of Bas -Congo, the

Comitato Internazionale Per Lo Sviluppo Dei Popoli provided food and medical and

logistical assistance — through local NGOs — to 10,000 Congolese who had been

expelled from Angola. The short duration of these projects and the way in which they

are funded negatively impacts the sustainability of the results obtained.

4. Protection of indigenous peoples

54. According to the Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper 2011-2015, 80

per cent of cases brought before the courts related to land disputes. Since 2012, there

have been recurrent inter-community disputes between the Luba and the Twas

(indigenous peoples) in the province of Katanga (Kabalo, Kalermie, Kongolo,

Manono, Moba and Nyunzu), causing the displacement of approximately 4,000 Twas.

These conflicts originated in discrimination against the Twas, including in relation to

access to land ownership. UNHCR, through its partnership with Search for Common

Ground, has run awareness-raising campaigns among internally displaced persons and

returnees on peaceful cohabitation. The dialogue established between communities

and local government, with technical support from UNJHRO and UNHCR, has led to

a calmer situation in Kalermie.

D. Economic and social rights

55. The Democratic Republic of the Congo has significant natural resources which

are often exploited illegally. This situation remains a significant source of conflict and

violations of human rights, including economic and social rights. 11 The interventions

of international actors focus in particular on access to health and capacity -building in

local communities to allow their participation in drawing up plans for local

development with a view to improving their enjoyment of economic and social righ ts.

1. Access to basic health care

56. According to demographic and health surveys, the number of women benefiting

from a skilled birth attendant in a medical facility rose from 74 per cent in 2007 to 80

per cent in 2014. 12 UNFPA and the United States Agency for International

Development carried out advocacy and technical assistance activities which resulted in

the drafting of a bill on reproductive health and a national strategic plan on family

planning in 2013. With the assistance of UNFPA, training for midwives was integrated

into the National Reproductive Health Programme and the work of the Ministry for

Higher and University Education. In addition, the combined efforts of Cordaid, the

World Health Organization, UNFPA and UNICEF resulted in the equipping of medical

facilities and the regular supply of medicines and health products, which led to an

improvement in the provision of reproductive health services. These improvements

were achieved through good strategic planning and coordinated efforts by the

international community working with national and provincial authorities.

__________________

11

Statement made in 2008 by the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers .

12

Second demographic and health survey (2014), p. 130.

GE.15-14279 16/19

2. Combating discrimination with respect to persons living with HIV

57. The overall level of tolerance towards persons living with HIV was estimated to

be 6.4 per cent in 2007. 13 The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS and

UNFPA provided technical assistance towards the adoption of Act No. 08/011 of 14

July 2008 relating to the protection of the rights of persons living with HIV/AIDS and

affected persons. They supported the national multisector programme to combat AIDS

and the updating of the national strategic plan to combat HIV. The Governm ent

created units to combat HIV, centralizing the efforts of all its departments. Despite

those legal and institutional developments, the overall level of tolerance towards

persons living with HIV is 4.2 per cent (demographic and health survey 2014). This

slight decline in tolerance can be explained by the absence of measures accompanying

the law to protect persons living with HIV, the impunity of persons committing acts of

stigmatization and discrimination and the frequency of such acts. 14

3. Human rights with respect to natural resources

58. One of the principal objectives of the Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy

Paper 2011-2015 is to strengthen the legal and regulatory framework in the mining

sector. Communities bordering extractive resource operations areas do not enjoy some

economic and social rights (the rights to health and education, access to safe drinking

water and fair and equitable compensation) as a result of their limited capacities to

form committees to defend their rights in the face of insufficient Government action to

protect them.

59. Between 2012 and 2014, UNJHRO, the Carter Center, Cordaid and OSISA

provided technical assistance to more than 3,000 members of civil society and local

communities to ensure that they were able to contribute to the revision of the Mining

Code. Thus, civil society formulated recommendations which were sent to the

Government to ensure that the needs of local communities were taken into account in

areas in which natural resources are extracted. The recommendations highlighted the

lack of consultation with local communities regarding their development and the

enjoyment of their economic and social rights. The new code has yet to be adopted.

60. The Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper 2011-2015 also targets

improved management of the mining sector towards sustainable development of the

social environment. From 2012 to 2014, Cordaid supported the local communities of

Kolwezi and Fungurume (Katanga Province) in drawing up their local development

plans for 2016-2020 and 2015-2019, respectively. The plans aim to establish a

constructive dialogue between the communities, the companies Kamoa Copper SA and

Temke Fungurume Mining and the local authorities to ensure that development

priorities are taken into account and to protect the economic and social rights of the

communities.

61. Raising the awareness of national stakeholders, local communities and business

enterprises concerning the principles and norms of human rights in the context of the

exploitation of natural resources, in particular the John Ruggie principles, 15 should be

emphasized. The international community should make economic and social rights a

priority for intervention, including by providing the necessary assistance in this area to

all parties concerned. In addition, it should continue to support the Government in

order to combat the armed groups that are responsible for the illegal exploitation of

resources and the extreme insecurity that has engulfed the population. __________________

13

Demographic and health survey (2007), p. 130.

14

National strategic plan to fight AIDS: 2014-2017, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 2014.

15

The principles of John Ruggie, Special Representative of the Secretary -General on human rights

and transnational corporations and other business enterprises, were approved by the Human Ri ghts

Council in resolution A/HRC/RES/17/4 of 16 June 2011.

17/19 GE.15-14279

V. Gender mainstreaming

62. The Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers of 2006 and 2011-2015

highlighted the negative impact of the socioeconomic situation on gender issues. With

the support of the international community, the Government has worked to reduce the

vulnerability of women from a legal and institutional standpoint.

63. Implementation of the 2006 Sexual Violence Act has been strengthened by

officers in the justice system and the defence and security forces. The National Gender

Policy and its plan of action were adopted in 2009 and integrated into the National

Strategy to Combat Gender-based Violence. In 2010, the Government adopted a plan

to implement Security Council resolution 1325 (2000) on women, peace and security.

64. In accordance with the recommendation of the Special Representative of the

Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, advocacy by the international

community resulted in 2014 in the appointment of a personal representative of the

Head of State with responsibility for combating sexual violence and the recruitment of

child soldiers.

VI. Conclusion

65. The volatile political, security and economic context in the Democratic

Republic of the Congo raises numerous challenges in terms of human rights.

66. The interventions of the international community have been relevant and

effective in dealing with these challenges. They have also helped to improve the

legal and institutional framework. They have furthermore contributed to

capacity-building for many national stakeholders, contributed to greater

awareness of obligations on the part of the authorities and greater knowledge of

human rights on the part of population groups and civil society. As a result,

considerable progress has been achieved in fighting impunity and numerous

interventions have led to greater protection of the civilian population in the east

of the country.

67. Nevertheless, the majority of technical assistance interventions were carried

out in emergency situations and were short-term. Sustainability and ownership of

the interventions proved to be a major challenge, both to those exercising their

rights and to those whose role it was to protect them. In addition, some

interventions by the international community were characterized by duplication

and competition and occasionally by a lack of coordination with other actors due

to the importance accorded by certain donors to specific issues or places or to the

desire for visibility and fund-seeking.

68. There are still significant challenges in promoting and protecting human

rights that require sustained and strategic technical assistance from the

international community, as well as stronger coordination between international

partners and between stakeholders and the Government in identifying,

implementing and monitoring interventions — without forgetting to involve the

beneficiaries.

GE.15-14279 18/19

VII. Recommendations

A. To the Government

(a) Define the priorities for the justice and human rights sectors and

coordinate the interventions of the international community aimed at promoting

and protecting human rights at the central, provincial and local levels;

(b) Take appropriate measures to ensure the harmonious operation of all

institutions responsible for implementing human rights (the human rights liaison

entity, the National Human Rights Commission, the Interministerial Technical

Committee on the drafting and follow-up to human rights reports and the

National Commission for Preparation of and Follow-up to the UPR) and the

effectiveness of the National Human Rights Commission and the unit for the

protection of human rights defenders; establish an independent national

mechanism for the prevention of torture;

(c) Improve the legal framework for human rights by acceding to those

conventions that have not yet been ratified and by adopting the relevant laws,

notably those that are pending;

(d) Adopt an inclusive approach to technical assistance by strengthening

the capacities of individuals, institutions and relations with civil society.

B. To the United Nations Joint Human Rights Office and the United Nations country team

(a) Provide the Government with technical assistance with a view to:

 Finalizing the process for the adoption of legislation relating to the

protection of human rights;

 Submitting the reports due to the international human rights

mechanisms;

 Achieving the effective and harmonious operation of the human rights

institutions, including the unit for the protection of human rights

defenders, the National Human Rights Commission, the

Interministerial Technical Committee on the drafting and follow-up to

initial and periodic human rights reports and the human rights liaison

entity.

(b) Make economic and social rights a priority for intervention, in

particular through the dissemination of the norms and principles of human

rights, including concerning the exploitation of natural resources;

(c) Establish a knowledge management system in order to improve the

preservation of institutional memory and to ensure that interventions are

documented and the results obtained are disseminated to political decision

makers, the private sector, local communities and other relevant actors.

C. To the international community

(a) Improve the involvement of national authorities and beneficiaries in

the design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of projects concerning the

19/19 GE.15-14279

promotion and protection of human rights, taking their priorities into account to

achieve greater impact;

(b) Prioritize structural and long-term interventions, including in the west

of the country, in order to maximize their long-term impact;

(c) Coordinate the implementation and monitoring of interventions

relating to technical assistance in order to improve their effectiveness and their

impact.