Patriotic Resistance Front of Ituri

Front for Patriotic Resistance in Ituri
Participant in Ituri conflict
Active 2002–
Groups Ngiti (Lendu)
Leaders Germain Katanga  (POW)
Baudouin Adirodo
Cobra Matata   (POW)[1]
Headquarters Bunia, Ituri Province, D.R. Congo
Area of operations Ituri Province, D.R. Congo
Size 1,000 (2015)[2]
Originated as Consolidation of Lendu groups, aided by D.R. Congo and Uganda[3]
Became Popular Front for Justice in Congo
Allies D.R. Congo Armed Forces (2002–03)
Uganda People's Defence Force (2002–03)[4]

Forces for Renewal
Nationalist and Integrationist Front
Opponents D.R. Congo Armed Forces
MONUSCO
Union of Congolese Patriots

The Front for Patriotic Resistance in Ituri (French: Force de résistance patriotique d’Ituri; FRPI) is a Bunia-based armed militia and political party primarily active in the south of the Ituri Province of northeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly the Orientale Province).

History

Origin

The FRPI was established in November 2002 from the Ngiti ethnolinguistic group, a subgroup of Lendu, as an ally to the Lendu-dominated Nationalist and Integrationist Front (FNI). The Ngiti, organized under traditional leaders, thus formed a counterweight to the Rwanda-backed and Hema-dominated Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC) in the Ituri conflict. The FRPI was supported by the Uganda-backed Forces for Renewal faction of the Rally for Congolese Democracy. In 2002–2003, the FRPI received support from both the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (FARDC) and Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF) in fighting against the UPC.[4] Both the DRC and Uganda had also assisted in the initial creation of the FRPI and FNI, though neither group ever established full control over Lendu fighters in Ituri.[3]

Operations

In May 2003, the FRPI reportedly had 9,000 combatants and be closely linked to the FNI.[5] By 2015, this number was estimated to have declined to 1,000.[2] In February 2003, the FRPI participated in the Bogoro massacre with the FNI. The FRPI joined the UPDF in a successful March 2003 offensive against the UPC and jointly occupied the town with the FNI in May 2003.[5] In 2006, the Congolese government signed a ceasefire with the FRPI and other rebel groups active in the northeast of the country. Though 15,000 FRPI soldiers were demobilized as part of the peace process and many commanders integrated into the FARDC, violent FRPI activity returned in 2008 with attacks by residual FRPI forces against Ituri villages and FARDC camps.[4][6] In September 2008, FRPI commanders splintered off to form the Popular Front for Justice in Congo (FPJC).[6][7] Whereas its ally the FNI largely transformed into a political party in 2005, the FPRI has resisted disarmament and demobilization campaigns. In the 2010s, the FARDC launched search operations against the FRPI, deemed the most successful government operations since the 2013 defeat of the March 23 Movement by United Nations envoy Martin Kobler.[4]

Initially led by Germain Katanga, FRPI leadership switched in 2005 to Baudouin Adirodo.[8] Katanga was arrested and flown to the International Criminal Court at The Hague in October 2007 to face charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity, including the use of child soldiers and promotion of sexual slavery. He was found guilty in March 2014.[9][10]

References

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