EU Urges Rwanda To Stop Supporting M23 Rebels In DR Congo
The European Union on Saturday urged Rwanda to stop supporting the M23 rebel group, which has captured swathes of territory in North Kivu province in neighbouring DR Congo.
The DRC -- along with the United States and several European countries -- has repeatedly accused its smaller central African neighbour Rwanda of backing the M23, although Kigali denies the charge.
The Tutsi rebel group has in recent months advanced to within a few dozen kilometres of provincial capital Goma.
EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said Saturday that the European bloc had urged Rwanda to "stop supporting the M23 and use all means to press the M23 to comply with the decisions taken by the EAC (East African Community)" and at a November summit in Angola.
"It also firmly urges all states of the region to prevent the provision of any support to armed groups active in the DRC," said Borrell.
He called on Kinshasa to "take all measures necessary to protect the civilian population in its territory".
Under heavy international pressure to disarm, M23 joined a ceremony last week to deliver the strategic town of Kibumba to an East African military force as a "goodwill gesture" for peace.
The EAC also said the group had to withdraw to the border between the DRC, Uganda and Rwanda.
However, the Congolese army promptly dubbed the Kibumba handover a "sham."
Borrell's comments came after a UN experts' report on DR Congo indicated it had collected proof of "direct intervention" by Rwandan defence forces inside DRC territory between at least November 2021 and last October.
The experts' report says Rwandan troops launched operations to reinforce the M23 against the mainly Hutu Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) -- notably by supplying weapons, ammunition and uniforms.
Kigali sees the FDLR as a threat which justifies interventions inside the DRC.
Rwanda has also accused the DRC -- where presidential elections are due next December -- of using the conflict for political purposes as well as of "fabricating" a November massacre of at least 131 civilians.
A UN probe blamed the deaths on M23 rebels.
Prior to the massacre, Angola had been mediating peace talks designed to pave the way for a truce agreement.
In a statement Saturday, Kinshasa welcomed the findings of the UN experts, which it said "put an end to the lies and manipulations" of Rwanda.
Given the gravity of the allegations, it called for the UN Security Council to examine the experts' report with a view to possible sanctions against Rwanda.
Rwanda's President Paul Kagame meanwhile, blamed Kinshasa for the chaos in its wartorn eastern regions in his new year address.
"After spending tens of billions of dollars on peacekeeping over the past two decades, the security situation in Eastern Congo is worse than ever," Kagame said in a statement Saturday.
"To explain this failure, some in the international community blame Rwanda, even though they know very well that the true responsibility lies primarily with the government of the DRC.
"It is high time that the unwarranted vilification of Rwanda stopped."
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