Rwanda-backed M23 rebels occupy a 2nd major city in Congo's mineral-rich
east
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[February 17, 2025]
By CHINEDU ASADU, PASCAL CINAMULA and JANVIER BARHAHIGA
BUKAVU, Congo (AP) — Rwanda-backed rebels have occupied a second major
city in mineral-rich eastern Congo, the government said Sunday, as M23
rebels confirmed they were in the city to restore order after it was
abandoned by Congolese forces.
The Congo River Alliance, a coalition of rebel groups that includes the
M23, said in a statement that its fighters “decided to assist the
population of Bukavu” in addressing its security challenges under the
“old regime” in the city of 1.3 million people.
"Our forces have been working to restore the security for the people and
their property, much to the satisfaction of the entire population,”
alliance spokesperson Lawrence Kanyuka said in a statement.
The rebels saw little resistance from government forces against the
unprecedented expansion of their reach after years of fighting. Congo's
government vowed to restore order in Bukavu but there was no sign of
soldiers. Many were seen fleeing on Saturday alongside thousands of
civilians.
The M23 are the most prominent of more than 100 armed groups vying for
control of eastern Congo’s trillions of dollars in mineral wealth that's
critical for much of the world's technology. The rebels are supported by
about 4,000 troops from neighboring Rwanda, according to the United
Nations experts.
The fighting has displaced more than 6 million people in the region,
creating the world's largest humanitarian crisis.
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Rebels vow to ‘clean up’ disorder
Bernard Maheshe Byamungu, one of the M23 leaders who has been sanctioned
by the U.N. Security Council for rights abuses, stood in front of the
South Kivu governor’s office in Bukavu and told residents they have been
living in a “jungle."
“We are going to clean up the disorder left over from the old regime,”
Byamungu said, as some in the small crowd of young men cheered the
rebels on to “go all the way to Kinshasa," Congo's capital, nearly 1,000
miles away.
Congo's communications ministry in a statement on social media
acknowledged for the first time that Bukavu had been “occupied” and said
the national government was “doing everything possible to restore order
and territorial integrity” in the region.
One Bukavu resident, Blaise Byamungu, said the rebels marched into the
city that had been “abandoned by all the authorities and without any
loyalist force."
“Is the government waiting for them to take over other towns to take
action? It’s cowardice,” Byamungu added.
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M23 rebels enter the centre of east Congo's second-largest city,
Bukavu, and take control of the South Kivu province administrative
office, Sunday, Feb. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/Janvier Barhahiga)
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Fears of regional escalation
Unlike in 2012, when the M23 briefly seized Goma and withdrew after
international pressure, analysts have said the rebels this time are
eyeing political power.
The fighting in Congo has connections with a decadeslong ethnic
conflict. The M23 says it is defending ethnic Tutsis in Congo.
Rwanda has claimed the Tutsis are being persecuted by Hutus and
former militias responsible for the 1994 genocide of 800,000 Tutsis
and others in Rwanda. Many Hutus fled to Congo after the genocide
and founded the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda
militia group.
Rwanda says the militia group is “fully integrated” into the
Congolese military, which denies it.
But the new face of the M23 in the region — Corneille Nangaa — is
not Tutsi, giving the group “a new, more diverse, Congolese face, as
M23 has always been seen as a Rwanda-backed armed group defending
Tutsi minorities,” according to Christian Moleka, a political
scientist at the Congolese think tank Dypol.
Congo’s President Felix Tshisekedi, whose government on Saturday
asserted that Bukavu remained under its control, has warned of the
risk of a regional expansion of the conflict.
Congo's forces were being supported in Goma by troops from South
Africa and in Bukavu by troops from Burundi. But Burundi's
president, Evariste Ndayishimiye, appeared to suggest on social
media his country would not retaliate in the fighting.
The conflict was high on the African Union summit's agenda in
Ethiopia over the weekend, with U.N. Secretary-General António
Guterres warning it risked spiraling into a regional conflagration.
Still, African leaders and the international community have been
reluctant to take decisive action against M23 or Rwanda, which has
one of Africa's most powerful militaries. Most continue to call for
a ceasefire and a dialogue between Congo and the rebels.
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Asadu reported from Abuja, Nigeria.
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