Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Why Hasn’t the UNSC Sanctioned Rwanda or Referred Its President to the ICC?
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
29 Jan 2025
🖨️ Print Article
child refugees in Congo
People displaced by the fighting with Rwandan forces make their way to the center of Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2025. Photo: Moses Sawasawa/AP

The UN Security Council (UNSC) has never sanctioned Rwanda or referred its president to the International Criminal Court (ICC), despite decades of UN documentation of their international crimes in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

On December 27, Rwanda’s M23 militia claimed to have seized Goma, the capital of Congo’s North Kivu Province and a city of three million people. Some sources reported, however, that Congolese forces were still fighting.

On January 28, Al Jazeera reported that protestors in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), had attacked the embassies of France, Belgium, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, and the US, accusing them all of responsibility for Rwanda’s war in DRC’s eastern North and South Kivu Provinces.

Rwandan forces had killed 13 UN peacekeepers from South Africa, Malawi, and Uruguay and the military governor of North Kivu Province, Major General Peter Cirimwami.

Electricity in Goma was out, children were out of school, and there were bodies in the streets. Hundreds of thousands of Congolese people were fleeing Rwandan troops and M23.

Rwanda had cut off electricity and water supplies and used advanced weaponry to interfere with GPS required for humanitarian operations.

Three days earlier, on January 25, the UN Security Council met about the crisis for three and a half hours. In addition to Council members, Congolese and Rwandan representatives were invited to speak, as were those of Angola, Burundi, South Africa, and Uruguay and the heads of UN peacekeeping, and relief operations in DRC. 

All voiced support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of DRC. Most all called on Rwanda to withdraw its forces from DRC and stop supporting M23, but only a few, including South Africa and DRC, explicitly proposed imposing UN sanctions on Rwanda.

In an eloquent statement, Congolese Minister of Foreign Affairs Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner said:

“What the DRC is going through is not a conflict like others. It is a deliberate and methodical aggression against a sovereign state, a flagrant violation of the founding principles of this organization and an intolerable attack against international peace and security.

“The Democratic Republic of the Congo legitimately expects from this council to act firmly and promptly to safeguard international peace and security and to uphold international law. This is a power that is exclusively granted to the Council by the UN Charter.”

She said that the Council could not keep limiting its responses to “declarations of concern” and “remain seized of the matter.” Instead she called on it to:

  1. Order the end of hostilities by Rwanda and demand the immediate withdrawal of Rwandan troops on Congolese soil;
  2. impose targeted sanctions, including asset freezes and travel bans, not only against members of the Rwandan chain of command, but also against the political decisionmakers responsible for the aggression;
  3. embargo all mineral exports labeled as Rwandan, especially coltan and gold, in order to end the illicit exploitation of DRC’s mineral wealth at the heart of the conflict;
  4. revoke Rwanda’s status as a troop contributor to UN peacekeeping operations; and
  5. establish a systematic regime of violation of all transfer or sale of weapons to Rwanda by member states or private entities.

One more measure that the Council is empowered to take is referral of Rwanda’s leaders to the International Criminal Court for investigation and potential indictment for their well-documented international crimes. Some ambassadors and officials identified the attacks on UN peacekeepers as war crimes, and previous UN reports have identified Rwanda’s crimes against humanity. The 2010 UN Mapping Report even documented crimes that it said could be judged as genocide if brought to a competent court.

The ICC indicted Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi, Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir, Ivory Coast’s Laurent Gbagbo, and Russia’s Vladimir Putin, but despite decades of abundance of his crimes, it has never indicted Rwandan President Paul Kagame or any of his top officials and commanders. This demonstrates, of course, that Western leaders use the ICC to pursue their political agendas, not to impose international criminal justice.

The UN Security Council has never taken the measures proposed by DRC’s Foreign Minister nor the referral of Paul Kagame to the ICC and most likely never will. Why? No doubt because the illegal minerals traffic is enriching powerful Western states, corporations, and individuals who ultimately prefer the status quo, no matter how much suffering it causes the Congolese people.

Another equally sinister reason may lie in the roots of the Rwandan Genocide, the 1994 tragedy that Kagame and his Rwandan Patriotic Front party have used as an excuse to justify their tyrannical rule in Rwanda, their ethnic Tutsi dominance, and their crimes in DRC ever since.

If Kagame were ever brought before the ICC, he might well start talking about Bill Clinton and other members of the US State Department, military, and national security apparatus involved in covert support for his Rwandan Patriotic Army’s aggression in Rwanda during the 1990 to 1994 Rwandan Civil War, which ended in the infamous 90-day bloodbath.

 In 2009, at an International Peace Institute event, Kagame said, “Genocide in Rwanda — the causes of it are not Rwandan, are not African.” The genocide, he said, “has its roots somewhere else.” 

He went on to criticize the International Criminal Court as unfairly targeting Africans. Indeed, prior to its indictment of Vladimir Putin, the ICC had earned its reputation as the International Caucasian Court for prosecuting Africans. However, without naming individuals or countries, Kagame seemed to be warning  that, should he one day find himself on trial in the Hague, he would start naming names and countries outside Rwanda's borders who organized and benefited from the 1994 bloodbath and its aftermath in DRC.

Ann Garrison is a Black Agenda Report Contributing Editor based in the San Francisco Bay Area. In 2014, she received the Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza Democracy and Peace Prize for her reporting on conflict in the African Great Lakes region. She can be reached at ann@anngarrison.com. You can help support her work on Patreon.

Congo
DRC
Rwanda
M23
Paul Kagame
United Nations

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
The Kagame Regime Must Not Be Allowed to Seize the Archives of the ICTR
08 July 2026
The records of the International Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda should not be surrendered to the Rwandan regime led by President Paul Ka
Abayomi Azikiwe
Ebola Virus Disease Outbreak in Central and East Africa Causes Alarm
03 June 2026
Since early May, the World Health Organization and the African Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have been working to contain the spre
Reynoldson Mompoint
Outsourced: Chad as the armed wing of a low-visibility American strategy
13 May 2026
The Chadian troops arriving in Haiti are the visible arm of imperialist intervention in which the United States projects force without putting
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
Rwanda’s 30-Year Assault on Congo: The Crimes, the Criminals, and the Cover-up
01 April 2026
Rwanda’s 30-year Assault on the Demo
Nicholas Mwangi
UN Declares Transatlantic Slavery the “gravest crime against humanity”
01 April 2026
The UN has adopted a landmark declaration, introduced by Ghana, recognizing the transatlantic slave trade as the “gravest crime against humanit
Essam Elkorghli
On the Assassination of Saif Al-Islam Qaddafi: Another Tale of Imperialist Treason
11 February 2026
The son of President Muammar Qaddaffi, Saif Qaddafi, has been assassinated by local forces, some of whom contributed to the destruction of a fl
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
Women for Peace Collaborate to Support Rwanda, Congo, and Rwandan Political Prisoner Victoire Ingabire
10 December 2025
CODEPINK is collaborating with the International Women’s Network for Democracy and Peace, which works for peace and democracy in Afri
Maurice Carney
United States Secures its National Security Interests In Congo Peace Deal
10 December 2025
The so-called "peace agreement" between Rwanda and Congo prioritizes U.S. access to mineral riches.
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
A Tale of Two Ceasefires: Gaza and DRC
22 October 2025
The US has negotiated ceasefires in Gaza and the DRC’s eastern Kivu Provinces, but the killing, displacement, and devastation in both continue.
Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
Dr. Denis Mukwege’s Nobel Peace Prize Brought No Peace to the Congolese
15 October 2025
Awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to “the man who heals women” made Euro-Americans feel good without interrupting their catastrop

More Stories


  • UN General Assembly
    Alfred de Zayas , John Perry
    UN Human Rights Council Again Supports US Regime Change Plans for Nicaragua
    10 Apr 2024
    The United States uses its power within the United Nations and the concept of human rights to cover its plans for regime change.
  • Baltimore Key Bridge collapse
    Sharon Black
    Deadly Bridge Collapse Exposes Capitalist Decay
    10 Apr 2024
    The deaths of the six Latino immigrant workers in the Baltimore bridge collapse encapsulates the injustice inherent in the U.S. capitalist system.
  • Black Agenda Radio
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio April 5, 2024
    05 Apr 2024
    This week, BAR's poet-in-residence discusses his work, we learn why Bill Clinton, the CIA director and Tony Blair recently visited Guyana. First, the Black vote and election year politics in Michigan.
  • Map of Michigan
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    The Black Vote and Swing State Michigan in 2024
    05 Apr 2024
    Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of Pan-African News Wire joins to discuss Michigan's Black voters, the Abandon Biden campaign, and the prospects for the swing state in the 2024 presidential election.
  • Raymond Nat Turner
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Raymond Nat Turner, Upsurge NYC and Black Agenda Report
    05 Apr 2024
    BAR Poet-in-Residence, Raymond Nat Turner, joins us from New York City to talk about his work and an upcoming performance with his group, Upsurge New York City.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us