As M23 rebel group advances in Congo, a new leader signals a shift in
its identity
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[February 01, 2025]
By RODNEY MUHUMUZA
KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — After Rwanda-backed M23 rebels took control of
the biggest city in eastern Congo this week, the man who emerged from
the shadows to assert his leadership was not the group's long-time
military leader.
Sultani Makenga, an ethnic Tutsi rebel leader sanctioned by both the
U.S. and the U.N., was nowhere to be seen in Goma’s Serena Hotel as the
bearded Corneille Nangaa, in military fatigues, was ushered into the
hall. Nangaa, who is not a Tutsi and who analysts say brings a more
diverse, Congolese face to the group, told reporters of his plan to
fight all the way to Kinshasa, the national capital a thousand miles
away.
The spectacle was significant because it captures the evolution of M23
from an ethnic Tutsi-dominated outfit more than a decade ago to one
that’s now actively seeking to be seen as a Congolese nationalist group.
That's the case despite the military support it gets from neighboring
Rwanda, according to observers and analysts in Africa’s Great Lakes
region.
From election chief to rebel leader
Nangaa is the former head of Congo's electoral body who oversaw the 2018
presidential election won by President Félix Tshisekedi. He has been a
controversial figure in Congolese politics for years. As the election
commission chair, he oversaw the heavily criticized vote that elected
Tshisekedi and led the U.S. to sanction him in 2019 for undermining
Congo's democracy.
A falling-out with Congolese authorities, including a dispute over a
mining concession, sent Nangaa into exile in Kenya. In 2023, he joined
the Congo River Alliance, a political-military coalition including 17
parties and rebel groups opposed to the government of Tshisekedi and
became a top political figure.
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Besides the mining, his grievance is also believed to be due to the
president’s alleged refusal to advocate for the U.S. dropping Nangaa
from its sanctions list, according to Christian Moleka, a political
scientist at the Congolese think tank Dypol. “His perception that he had
been mistreated by the authorities is what pushed him towards
radicalization,” Moleka said.
An unholy matrimony
Last year, Makenga’s M23 joined Nangaa’s Congo River Alliance and with
Nangaa at the helm of the revamped outfit, the M23 looked even more
menacing to Congolese authorities, analysts say.
M23 is more of a threat now because the group is trying to “decouple the
question of self-determination in eastern Congo” from evidence of
Rwandan support, said Angelo Izama, an analyst with the Uganda-based
Fanaka Kwawote think tank.
The rebels want to provoke a national discussion on widespread feelings
of neglect in eastern Congo while gaining “as much territory as possible
such that they can force the Congolese state to deal with questions of
genuine autonomy and to force some kind of negotiation,” he said.
Forcing political negotiations is “a smart move” for the rebels, “the
only path out of this crisis,” he added.
M23 forcing local alliances in Congo
Unlike in 2012, when the M23 took Goma in a campaign led by
Kinyarwanda-speaking fighters pushing mainly for their full integration
into the Congolese army, “this time it has a national agenda,” the
Crisis Group think tank said of M23 in a recent assessment.
With Nangaa’s Congo River Alliance as the “political umbrella" for the
M23, the think tank said the rebels have accumulated resources and
allies that made them “attractive partners not only to armed groups in
eastern (Congo) but to others aiming to undermine Tshisekedi.”
“This is in line with (Rwanda's) probable strategy of creating a
deniable but powerful Congolese front to exact the maximum leverage over
Kinshasa and confirm its dominance of North Kivu (province), at a
minimum,” the think tank said.
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Rebel leader of rebel group of Alliance Fleuve Congo (AFC) including
M23, Corneille Nangaa, addresses a news conference in Goma,
Democratic republic of the Congo, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP
Photo/Brian Inganga)
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United Nations experts have asserted that some 4,000 Rwandan troops
back M23 rebels in North Kivu. To take Goma, which is strategically
located close to the Rwanda border, the rebels defeated Congolese
government troops who long had been supported by local militias
known as Wazalendo as well as U.N. and regional peacekeepers and
mercenaries from Europe.
M23 was once defeated but regrouped after a failed amnesty
M23 has about 6,500 fighters, according to U.N. estimates. It
emerged in 2012 as a rebel group led by Congolese ethnic Tutsis who
said a 2009 agreement signed to look after their interests —
including integration into the army and the return of refugees from
elsewhere in east Africa — had been violated by Congo’s government.
Led by Makenga, a Congolese Tutsi, M23 took Goma in a November 2012
offensive and pulled out days later under international pressure.
They were later repulsed by U.N. forces fighting alongside Congolese
government troops in a military campaign that forced hundreds of
them to flee to Rwanda and Uganda. Makenga, a self-appointed
major-general often seen wielding a herder’s staff in the bush, was
among those who fled to Uganda.
In December 2013, with hundreds of the rebels cantoned in a remote
forested area of western Uganda, M23 signed an agreement with
Congo’s government that called for the repatriation of the rebels to
Congo within a year. That proved difficult to achieve because of a
dispute over the rebels’ demand for a blanket amnesty while Congo’s
government wanted commanders such as Makenga tried for their alleged
crimes against civilians.
In 2016, hundreds of M23 rebels fled custody in Uganda, from where
they were to be airlifted back to Congo. The rebels resurfaced in
2021 and became the most potent of more than 100 armed groups vying
for control in the mineral-rich territory. The U.S. Department of
Commerce estimates mineral deposits there to be worth $24 trillion,
most of them crucial to global technology.
A new face politically motivated
Unlike in 2012, Nangaa's selling point as the face of M23 is that he
is from the Haut-Uele province and not Tutsi," said Moleka with the
Dypol Congolese think tank. "This allows M23 to give itself a new,
more diverse, Congolese face, as M23 has always been seen as a
Rwanda-backed armed group defending Tutsi minorities,” said Moleka.
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The Washington-based Africa Center for Strategic Studies, in an
analysis published Wednesday, cited “a shifting political calculus
by sponsors" of M23. Efforts to establish a parallel civilian
administration and expand the illicit exploitation of minerals
“suggests that the rebel group and their regional backers have
longer-term objectives in holding and potentially expanding their
territorial control," according to the assessment by Paul Nantulya,
a Ugandan analyst with the group.
At an M23 news conference in Goma on Thursday, Nangaa said the
rebels aim to set up a new administration in the city of 2 million
people that's now home to hundreds of thousands of displaced
Congolese. The rebels spoke to reporters of their plans to return
displaced people to their homes, presenting a major challenge to
Tshisekedi.
"We are here in Goma to stay as Congolese,” Nangaa said. “We will
continue the march for liberation all the way to Kinshasa.”
___
Associated Press writer Mark Banchereau in Paris contributed to this
report.
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