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by Staff Writers Kinshasa (AFP) Jan 05, 2015 Democratic Republic of Congo rebel leader Cobra Matata arrived handcuffed in the capital Kinshasa Monday amid army accusations that he'd sought to resume his insurgency in the country's north-east. A ranking officer of the Congolese army told AFP Sunday that the surrendered rebel chief -- whose real name is Banaloki Matata -- was being transferred to Kinshasa following an "attempt to flee to his former guerrilla turf" in the Ituri district of the northeastern Orientale province. Matata was arrested Friday while allegedly seeking to rejoin units of the Patriotic Revolutionary Forces of Ituri (FRPI) that he commanded until late last year, presumably to resume leadership of its armed uprising. He arrived, wearing a Congolese army uniform, aboard a plane of the UN's MONUSCO force flown from Bunia in the Orientale province at 2:30 pm (13:30 GMT). The army official told AFP that once Matata had arrived in Kinshasa, "there'd be a review and full constitution of his case file by (military) services, and its subsequent transfer to the military justice system." A deserter of the national army, Matata took charge of the FRPI in 2010. Last November he surrendered with several other leaders of his insurrection to military authorities. All told, some 400 FRPI fighters agreed to put down their arms, but the surrender process quickly bogged down and little progress in their decommissioning has been made. While negotiating his November surrender, Matata demanded to be reinstated in the DRCongo army with the grade of general. He also insisted members of his militia be given a general amnesty, and those agreeing to surrender be integrated into the army with the same rank they'd attained in the FRPI. The FRPI is one of many militias formed along largely ethnic lines that fought in Ituri between 1999 and 2007 for a stake in the natural resources -- including gold -- the region is rich with. Several thousands of FRPI militants and many more from other rebel forces accepted demobilisation in 2004-2006 but the group began reforming in late 2007. The FRPI began luring back fighters as it kicked its rebellion into higher gear, with Matata taking control of the militia in 2010 after his defection from the army. Following a 2011 army reform law, military authorities have steadfastly refused any quid pro quos in negotiating the demobilisation and disarming of rebel groups. str-hab/mj/tsz/bc/pvh Sixty former rebels surrendered their weapons in the Democratic Republic of Congo's troubled northeast Ituri region, the United Nations said Thursday. "Sixty ex-combatants from the Nationalist and Integrationist Front (FNI) arrived Thursday in Bunia," UN Observer Mission in DR Congo (Monuc) spokesman Madnodje Mounoubai told AFP. The former rebels, according to Mounoubai, are waiting to be picked up by the Democratic Republic of Congo forces (FARDC), and they will probably be transferred to the soldier reintegration centre in the west of the country. The 60 stepped up a few days after three former warlords from Ituri arrived in Kinshasa on November 2, as part of a peace deal with the government, signed before the elections in July 2006. The former militia chiefs include Peter Karim from FNI, "Cobra" Matata Wanaloki from the Patriotic Resistance Forces in Ituri (FRPI) and Matthieu Ngujolo of the Congolese Revolutionary Movement. "It is difficult to say exactly the number of militia who remain who need to be disarmed as they arrive voluntarily and in drips and drabs," Mounoubai said. Since 2005, the national disarmament and reintegration process has processed 20,000 former militiamen. Ituri has been the 1999 of violent skirmishes between militia as well as inter-ethnic violence that have between them killed more than 60,000, according to humanitarian agencies. bbos-sb/lb/nb
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