Goma – The army in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has explicitly accused Rwanda of supporting an armed rebellion in the east of the vast country, charges Kigali denied on Tuesday.
After months of suspicion and decades of mistrust between the two neighbours, a spokesperson for the military governor of North Kivu province issued a statement saying the March 23 Movement (M23) “backed by the Rwanda Defence Force, (RDF) carried out incursions and attacked positions” of the army overnight on Sunday-Monday.
The attacks took place at Tchanzu and Runyoni, in the Rutshuru area, the spokesperson, general Sylvain Ekenge, said in the statement late Monday.
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Sources in civil society groups in the region said fighting resumed on Tuesday morning between government troops and the rebels from M23, also known as the Congolese Revolutionary Army.
M23 emerged from an ethnic Tutsi Congolese rebellion that Rwanda and Uganda had supported in the border province plagued by myriad armed groups over the last 25 years.
M23 was defeated by the army in 2013 but has resurfaced since November and been accused of staging several raids on military strongholds around Rutshuru.
The movement claimed the authorities in the capital Kinshasa have failed to respect commitments undertaken to ease the demobilisation and integration of its combatants.
DRC Communications Minister and government spokesperson Patrick Muyaya said on Monday night that following the army accusations, the foreign ministry would “invite Rwanda’s ambassador on Tuesday so that he comes to give us some explanations”.
The governor of Rwanda’s western province, Francois Habitegeko, hit back on Twitter on Tuesday.
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“We would like to categorically refute the baseless accusations and state that RDF is not by any means involved in the belligerent activities,” in DR Congo, he wrote.
Since Rwandan Hutus accused of slaughtering Tutsis during the 1994 genocide flooded into the DRC, Kigali has been regularly accused of incursions into Congolese territory and of backing armed rebels in the east.
Ties improved with the 2019 arrival in power of President Felix Tshisekedi, who has met his Rwandan counterpart Paul Kagame several times.
However, M23’s re-emergence has renewed tensions. The group put out a statement at the weekend saying army operations “against its combatants probably show the definitive choice of the Republic’s government to fight it out with M23”.
The provinces of North Kivu and Ituri were placed under a state of siege in May with local authorities replaced by army officers and police but violence has continued unabated.
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Source: AFP
Picture: Twitter / @MartinHamisi
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