I'll somewhat repeat the other answers, but I hope to clarify it more.
First problem: Object Map files. These are simple XMLs files. They could easily be tracked to version control, unfortunately IBM did a mess here. They don't use a good parse library for the XML. It must be contained in just one line. If you tidify the code, it won't be parsed any more. Since the version control software tracks line differences, every simple change will create a mess of a conflict.
Even if it worked after reformatting to multiple lines, each little modification (e.g., add a new test object) would reorder all the xml contents. Sure, I tried it all.
In practice, the object map files are binary files and you must add the svn:lock property to each of them. They used XML just as a buzzword, intentionally preventing all the format advantages.
Second problem: RFT generates a lot of helper files from your object maps. These are the files in the "resources" directory. Against version control good practices, you must also manually commit these files. Be shure to commit everything that changes.
RFT has ClearCase integration, and it automatically checkout and checkin all the needed files. But don't get into this integration from Hell. You'd be better with Subversion.
Conclusion: If you use RFT, you are doomed to have sequential development. You can't have 2 developers working in the same codebase. Welcome to the 70's!