Rebel M23 condemns bombardments by DR Congo army
In Summary
Rebel forces are reportedly approaching Goma and exchanging fire even with
the UN peacekeeping mission.
KINSHASA
The rebel March 23
Movement (M23) has condemned the resumption of bombardments against its
positions by the army of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo) amid an
escalation of conflict in recent days in the troubled eastern province of North
Kivu.
"As usual, we believe that our troops will have to retaliate against the
attacks very soon," the M23 said in a statement sent to Xinhua on Monday, in
reference to the shelling by the DR Congo Armed Forces (FARDC) and its allies
along the Kanyaruchinya-Goma road.
The provincial capital Goma has again hit headlines with the rebel forces
reportedly approaching the town and exchanging fire even with the UN
peacekeeping mission.
The rebel group briefly occupied Goma in late November last year, before
pulling out under the pressure of the 11-member bloc of the Great Lakes
countries for talks.
WORSENING SITUATION
The worsening situation this year around Goma, which is near the border with
Rwanda, is stoking tensions between the two neighboring countries, which since
the 1990s accused each other of involvement of attacks.
The M23 statement warned that it holds the government entirely responsible
for all the consequences from the fighting.
Since Aug. 21, the M23 and FARDC being supported by the United Nations
intervention brigade have been fighting 15 km from the town of Goma, leaving 15
civilians dead and several others injured. The casualties were reportedly caused
by explosives thrown into the town.
The M23 is a group of
former rebels of the National Congress for the Defense of the People (CNDP),
which was routed out in early 2009. Some CNDP fighters were then integrated into
the army, before launching a new rebellion in April 2012, citing the failure of
the government to implement the peace accord signed on March 23, 2009 between
the two sides. (Xinhua)
Fresh Goma shelling kills two: witnesses
Fresh Goma shelling kills two: witnesses
In Summary
- In an open letter sent to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, M23 rebel leader Bertrand Bisimwa accused Kinshasa of targeting civilians and demanded an independent inquiry into its actions.
- Fighting has erupted sporadically since mid-July, ending a two-month lull in the violence, and the rebels moved closer to Goma, arguing that Kinshasa was reneging on its pledge to hold direct talks.
Shelling killed two people Saturday in Goma in the restive east of DR Congo
after a newly formed UN brigade took its first military action to back
government troops and prevent rebels from entering the mining hub, witnesses
said.
Three UN peacekeepers were wounded by shells that landed near their
positions, the UN mission MONUSCO said, charging that they had been targeted by
the rebels.
It was unclear who fired the deadly shell that smashed into Goma's western
neighbourhood of Ndosho, sparking an angry reaction from residents who blocked
access to vehicles, witnesses said.
"A shell has just landed on my neighbourhood," Ndosho resident Charles Paluku
told AFP on the phone, adding that two people had been reported dead.
Another witness speaking on condition of anonymity provided the same death
toll.
UN envoy to the African Great Lakes region Mary Robinson condemned the
violence, saying in a statement: "The attacks on the town of Goma as well as on
MONUSCO forces, and their tragic consequences on the civilian population already
traumatised by two decades of conflict, are unacceptable."
She added: "We must do everything to avoid an escalation of tension in the
region."
The United States also condemned the rebel attacks, hailing the world body's
efforts to protect the population.
State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said the US was "alarmed" by
the escalating fighting between the army and M23 rebels.
"We condemn the actions of the M23, which have resulted in civilian
casualties, attacks on the UN peacekeeping mission (MONUSCO) and significant
population displacements," Harf said in a statement, also expressing concern
over reports the M23 rebel movement had fired into Rwandan territory.
"We call on the M23 to immediately end the hostilities, lay down their arms,
and disband, in accordance with UN Security Council resolutions."
"Attacks against UN installations and personnel are unacceptable," she
said.
UN mission chief Martin Kobler warned after the Ndosho incident that attacks
"against the civilian population will not go unpunished".
Kobler, who has been in Goma since Friday, condemned the "indiscriminate and
unacceptable attacks against the civilian population".
"I have ordered the MONUSCO force to react with all necessary energy against
these frightful, unspeakable crimes," he said.
In an open letter sent to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, M23 rebel leader
Bertrand Bisimwa accused Kinshasa of targeting civilians and demanded an
independent inquiry into its actions.
"The Congolese government decided to shell the town of Goma causing the
deaths of men and creating a climate of despair among residents," he wrote in a
document seen by AFP Saturday.
The M23 was founded by former fighters in a Tutsi rebel group whose members
were integrated into the regular army under a 2009 peace deal that they claim
was never fully implemented.
Several of its leaders have been hit by UN sanctions over alleged atrocities
and the world body has accused Rwanda of arming -- and even of commanding -- the
rebels, a claim Kigali denies.
The M23 rebels briefly seized Goma last year and only pulled out following a
regionally brokered deal under which they were supposed to remain several miles
outside the city.
Fighting has erupted sporadically since mid-July, ending a two-month lull in
the violence, and the rebels moved closer to Goma, arguing that Kinshasa was
reneging on its pledge to hold direct talks.
The group has threatened to recapture Goma but UN forces, including a
3,000-strong intervention brigade with a robust mandate to eradicate armed
groups in the region, have moved in to create a security zone around the
city.
Following a fresh deadly bout of fighting that erupted on Wednesday, the UN
brigade launched its first military action against the M23, fighting alongside
the DR Congo army.
The brigade is made up mainly of troops from southern Africa.
Rwanda, which accused Congolese troops of firing a rocket and mortar shells
over the border over the past 48 hours, warned Saturday that it will not stand
by "indefinitely".
Eastern DR Congo, which borders Rwanda and Uganda, was the cradle of
back-to-back wars that drew in much of the region from 1996 to 2003 and were
fought largely over its vast wealth of copper, diamonds, gold and coltan, a key
mobile phone component.
The instability there was exacerbated by the aftermath of the Rwandan
genocide, when Hutus implicated in the killing of some 800,000 mostly Tutsi
victims fled across the border after Tutsi leader Paul Kagame came to
power.
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