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		Rebels agree to a ceasefire with African coalition troops departing from 
		eastern Congo
		[March 29, 2025]  
		By JUSTIN KABUMBA 
		GOMA, Congo (AP) — The M23 rebels in control of key areas of eastern 
		Congo agreed Friday to a ceasefire with African coalition peacekeepers 
		who have announced their withdrawal even as the conflict between the 
		insurgents and Congo 's government continues.
 The rebels and troops from the South African Development Community, or 
		SADC, said in a joint news release that they would work together to 
		rebuild the airport in the eastern hub of Goma, which was damaged when 
		rebels took over, so that the SADC troops could depart the country in an 
		orderly way.
 
 The force of several thousand peacekeeping troops from South Africa, 
		Malawi and Tanzania had been sent to eastern Congo by the SADC in 2023 
		to help the Congolese government pacify a mineral-rich region plagued by 
		various insurgencies.
 
 The troops failed to stop the lightning assaults starting in January by 
		the Rwanda-backed M23 rebels that have claimed several key cities and 
		that left several peacekeepers dead, eroding support for the mission in 
		the donor countries. The SADC leadership announced their withdrawal 
		earlier this month.
 
 The rebels and SADC troops gave no timetable for the withdrawal under 
		their accord.
 
 The SADC troops "will be leaving via Goma airport, but it has to be 
		repaired before they can leave,” M23 spokesman Lawrence Kanyuka said in 
		an interview with The Associated Press.
 
 Kanyuka called it a “historic day," and said that the agreement with the 
		SADC mission reflected an awareness that the conflict must be resolved 
		politically not through fighting.
 
 “We thank SADC today for understanding that there is no military 
		solution to this conflict. They came today, and we talked about 
		dialogue,” Kanyuka said, adding that their withdrawal was “one of the 
		prerequisites” for dialogue.
 
		
		 
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            Former members of the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of 
			Congo (FARDC) and police officers who allegedly surrendered to M23 
			rebels arrive in Goma, Congo, Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025. (AP Photo/Moses 
			Sawasawa, file) 
            
			 
            Kanyuka accused Congolese troops of violating ongoing ceasefire 
			negotiations and said that M23 had requested that the SADC “talk to 
			Kinshasa to get them to stop and adhere to this ceasefire, which we 
			have respected until now.”
 .The SADC mission was part of a myriad of forces operating in the 
			mineral-rich region plagued by decades of armed violence. They 
			include Congolese government soldiers, foreign mercenaries, a United 
			Nations peacekeeping force and more than 100 groups that are 
			fighting for power, land and valuable mineral resources. Others try 
			to defend their communities. Some armed groups have been accused of 
			mass killings targeting ethnic groups
 
 The M23 rebels are supported by about 4,000 troops from neighboring 
			Rwanda, according to U.N. experts, and at times have vowed to march 
			as far as Congo’s capital, Kinshasa, over 1,000 miles away.
 
 Rwanda has rejected charges, including by the Congolese government 
			and U.N experts, that it backs M23 in eastern Congo, a region that 
			is now one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises with more than 
			7 million people displaced.
 
 The withdrawal of SADC troops comes after the M23 took control of 
			eastern Congo’s main city of Goma and seized the second largest 
			city, Bukavu, in offensives over the past two months.
 
 Fourteen South African soldiers, and at least three from Malawi were 
			killed in January in the fighting. The United Nations later 
			evacuated a group of critically injured South African
 
			
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