Sarkozy calls on Congo, former foes to work together
By Joe Bavier
KINSHASA (Reuters) - President Nicolas Sarkozy, in Africa with a team of French executives eager for deals, urged Congo and its former enemies on Thursday to launch a new partnership based on exploiting the region's natural riches.
Sarkozy's appeal in the Democratic Republic of Congo helped calm the anger of some Congolese who interpreted his call in January for the vast country to "share the wealth" of eastern provinces with neighbouring Rwanda as a slight on sovereignty.
"I have certainly not come to tell you what to do," Sarkozy told Congo's parliament on the first visit by a French president in 25 years.
"The truth is that the peoples of central Africa will not change their address, nor the laws of nature. If they cooperate as good neighbours, they will be rich and peaceful. But if it is survival of the strongest, they will remain poor and unhappy."
A tussle for mineral riches, as well as national and ethnic rivalries, fuelled over a decade of conflict in the region.
Sarkozy's delegation includes executives from firms keen to get contracts to rebuild a country devastated by long neglect as well as war. France's state-controlled nuclear energy group Areva signed a uranium mining and prospecting deal with Congo.
Sarkozy commended Congolese President Joseph Kabila for reducing tensions with former enemies Uganda and Rwanda.
Kabila has allowed soldiers from both countries, who fought against him alongside Congolese rebels in a 1998-2003 war, to hunt down rebel militia groups operating in the former Belgian colony's lawless eastern borderlands. Continued...
