UN troops wounded as fighting flares in DRC


People gather at a busy road while carrying some of their belongings as they flee the Masisi territory following clashes between M23 rebels and government forces. (Aubin Mukoni/AFP)


People gather at a busy road while carrying some of their belongings as they flee the Masisi territory following clashes between M23 rebels and government forces. (Aubin Mukoni/AFP)

  • UN soldiers were wounded when two M23 shells landed on their camp in Mubambiro district.
  • M23 (March 23 Movement) launched a new offensive two weeks ago against several towns in the DRC.
  • A spokesperson for the North Kivu province’s army accused Rwandan forces of targeting the UN position at Sake during the clashes.

Clashes have broken out between government forces and M23 rebels leaving eight UN peacekeepers injured after a brief lull in fighting in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the United Nations said.

One of the peacekeepers was “gravely wounded” in the attack on Saturday at Sake, said UN mission head Bintou Keita.

The strategic town lies 20km west of Goma, capital of North Kivu province, and fighting resumed in the area on Saturday, witnesses said, after several days of quiet.

By midday Sunday, a precarious calm had settled over the region, the witnesses added.

A Congolese security source told AFP the UN soldiers were wounded when two M23 shells landed on their camp in Sake’s Mubambiro district.

M23 was shelling the town after “patriotic” militia known as “Wazalendo” that support the army had attacked the rebels, the source said.

The Tutsi-led M23 (March 23 Movement) launched a new offensive two weeks ago against several towns, 70km from Goma, extending its control northwards in the Rutshuru and Masisi territory.

READ | DRC lifts death-penalty moratorium to execute those who work with M23 – or show cowardice

Keita, the UN secretary-general’s special representative in the DRC, said in a statement the peacekeepers had been deployed in North Kivu for several weeks under Operation Springbok where the army and peacekeepers “are carrying out joint operations”.

Lieutenant-colonel Guillaume Ndjike, the province’s army spokesperson, accused Rwandan forces of targeting the UN position at Sake during the clashes.

The 15 000 UN troops deployed in the DRC started to leave at the end of February at the request of the Kinshasa government which considers them ineffective. The withdrawal is due to be completed by the end of the the year.

After eight years of dormancy, the M23 rebellion took up arms again in late 2021, seizing large swathes of North Kivu – cutting off all land access to Goma except the Rwandan border road in early February.

According to Kinshasa, the United Nations and Western countries, neighbouring Rwanda is backing the M23, which Kigali denies.

Tens of thousands of people have been displaced by the latest battles. The UN estimated at the end of 2023 that nearly seven million people were displaced in the DRC, including 2.5 million in North Kivu alone.



Source link