Viewing entries tagged
M23

M23 Talks: A Problem of Semantics

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M23 Talks: A Problem of Semantics

China cups clinked as delegates from the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda, the M23 rebel group and several international mediators and observers milled around a sea of circular tables, covered in white table-cloths. Uganda's President Museveni was not yet in attendance, but his palatial State House was set to be the stage of the signing of a peace accord between the rebels' political leadership and the Congolese government.

The delegates were shown to the negotiating room, whilst we, the media, were ushered to collect our equipment before, what we ...

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The Fall of M23

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The Fall of M23

Crowds of civilians lined the rugged dirt-road leading through a string of villages towards Bunagana. They were cheering and singing the hundreds of men in uniform that were marching up, the drab uniforms a stark contrast to the colourful cloths wrapped around ululating women. Sweat dripped down these soldiers' faces, their shoulders burdened with heavy, macabre instruments of destruction: tank shells, mortars and boxes of ammunition.

This was the first time the government army had been in these hills for well over a year, having been ousted in July 2012 by ...

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Making a killing

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Making a killing

In a dusty backstreet of Goma, where cars creep past slowly over the jagged, volcanic rock on which the city is built, Lulu Castofas sits under a parasol. He wears a flat cap and a thick, black beard, peppered with grey. Around his neck hangs a ...

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A (misleading) war of words in DRC

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A (misleading) war of words in DRC

"The UN has declared war" said a UN public information official as he flapped around his office yesterday, warning that the next day, he "may be working from the trenches." He handed me the press release and a map.

BBC News' Africa section runs as its...

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Kibumba Conflict Displaced

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Kibumba Conflict Displaced

After two weeks of relative calm in the M23-FARDC (Congolese army) conflict, fighting raged again yesterday around Rumangabo and Kibumba, the stage for the United Nation’s defences for Goma.

Heavy artillery and gunfire has caused thousands to flee their homes. Reports from Katale, which is currently inaccessible from Goma, talk of many huddled on the airstrip outside the UN base there. In Kibati, on the outskirts of the provincial capital, an aid agency say nearly 8000 have arrived.

Last night, they huddled outside under a heavy storm, and their numbers had swelled this afternoon, with forty people filling one, small classroom. The desks are stacked up outside as some of the rooms are used to register the displaced.

Land-cruisers emblazoned with aid agency logos mill about, but people here say that they have little to eat, and many will spend a cold night outdoors.

Fighting continued to rage today around Rumangabo, where the headquarters of the Virunga National Park is situated. Rebels had withdrawn from Rutshuru after they took it two weeks ago, but today they were fighting again for the town. As I post this, Jason Stearns says he has confirmed reports that neighbouring Kiwanja has fallen to M23 rebels. Incidentally, the UN has a large base there, manned by Indian peacekeepers.

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