Congo says U.S. to deploy counter-terrorism advisors to restive east
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[August 16, 2021]
By Hereward Holland
KINSHASA (Reuters) - Special forces from
the United States will soon deploy to Democratic Republic of Congo's
restive east to gauge the potential for a local anti-terrorism unit to
combat Islamist violence, President Felix Tshisekedi said on Sunday.
The Special Operations Forces arrived in Congo's capital Kinshasa on
Friday to "conduct an assessment of a future Congolese counter-terrorism
team," U.S. ambassador Mike Hammer said.
Tshisekedi said in a statement on Sunday that the troops would "provide
support to the (army) in the fight against terrorism and to the
guardians of the Virunga and Garamba national parks, which have become a
sanctuary for terrorist forces."
He said the troops would be present for several weeks in eastern Congo,
where martial law was established in May to try to end decades of
bloodshed.
Data collected by the Kivu Security Tracker, which maps unrest in the
region, attributes much of the recent violence to the Allied Democratic
Forces (ADF), an Islamist-inspired insurgency which U.S. officials have
linked to Islamic State.
The ADF, initially from Uganda, has been blamed for dozens of massacres
in the last three years, mostly in remote villages with hatchets and
firearms.
Islamic State has claimed responsibility for some of the killings, but
United Nations experts have doubted the militant group's influence over
ADF operations.
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President of Congo Democratic Republic Felix Tshisekedi reacts
during a joint news conference at the end of the Summit on the
Financing of African Economies in Paris, France May 18, 2021.
Ludovic Marin/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Some attacks blamed on the ADF could have been
committed by other militias, or by factions of Congo's own army,
U.N. and independent experts have said.
The U.N. has found that the ADF is getting better at making bombs,
but that they are used for "tactical, offensive, defensive and
harassment purposes rather than as a terrorist tool".
(Reporting by Hereward Holland, Editing by Cooper Inveen and Timothy
Heritage)
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