Bangkok Post

Indian troops quit posts in conflict-hit east, UN says

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GOMA: Rebel groups are making new gains in eastern DR Congo after Indian UN troops abandoned positions near a regional capital, according to an internal UN document seen by AFP.

The UN mission in Democratic Republic of the Congo (Monusco), which is being being wound down, said in a note to staff that “the current security situation is becoming increasing­ly volatile as M23 has reached the northern outskirts of Sake.”

Sake is about 25 kilometres from Goma, the largest city in North Kivu province where the population has doubled to two million as refugees flee the advance of the M23 rebel group.

According to the Monusco note, M23 forces have occupied at least three positions around Sake “since their abandonmen­t by INDRDB,” referring to the Indian contingent.

M23 and DR Congo forces exchanged artillery fire throughout the weekend around Sake and the western outskirts of Goma, residents said.

After eight relatively quiet years, M23 rebels in 2021 resumed their campaign to seize territory in eastern DR Congo.

The DR Congo government, the United Nations and Western countries accuse Rwanda of backing M23, but the Rwanda government denies any involvemen­t in the conflict.

The 15,000 UN troops deployed in DR Congo started to leave in 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.

The news followed an attack in a village in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s Ituri province, which saw at least 25 people killed.

According to local authoritie­s, the Cooperativ­e for the Developmen­t of the Congo (CODECO) group, one of many militias operating in the conflict-ridden east, carried out the killings.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Displaced Congolese refugees walk past makeshift shelters at the Mugunga camp for internally displaced people, outside Goma.
REUTERS Displaced Congolese refugees walk past makeshift shelters at the Mugunga camp for internally displaced people, outside Goma.

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