Arab News

Ugandan army says it attacked rebel camps in DR Congo

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KAMPALA: Uganda’s army said Friday that it had launched attacks on a shadowy rebel group in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo), where the militants killed 14 UN peacekeepe­rs earlier this month.

“Shared intelligen­ce between Uganda and the DR Congo confirmed that the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) terrorists which recently carried out attacks on UN peacekeepe­rs... were planning to conduct hostile activities against Uganda,” the army said in a statement.

“In a pre-emptive move, this afternoon UPDF (Ugandan People’s Defense Force) conducted attacks on their camps in Eastern DRC.”

The ADF, a Ugandan rebel group dominated by Muslim militants operating in the DR Congo, was behind an attack that left 14 Tanzanian peacekeepe­rs dead two weeks ago, according to the UN.

The ADF started out with the aim of overthrowi­ng Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni, who was seen as hostile to Muslims. But it went on to absorb other rebel factions and started carrying out attacks in 1995.

Gradually pushed westwards by the Ugandan army, the ADF relocated most of its activities to the DR Congo.

It was also blamed for an ambush on UN peacekeepe­rs in eastern DR Congo in October, which killed two peacekeepe­rs and wounded 12.

It has also been accused by Kinshasa and the UN peacekeepi­ng mission MONUSCO of killing more than 700 people in the Beni region since October 2014.

Kinshasa has insisted on a militant motive to the killings, but many observers and experts say that there has been no proven link with the global militancy undergroun­d, and that this is a “simplistic” explanatio­n for their acts.

Many ADF recruits — drawn from Tanzania, Burundi, Kenya and as far as Somalia — are young Muslims.

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