Rebel advance causes panic in Congolese border
20/2/2025 6:09
Volleys of gunfire rang out in
Democratic Republic of Congo's eastern border town of Uvira on
Wednesday, local sources said, as clashes broke out among allied
forces amid the advance of Rwanda-backed rebels.
Residents and officials described scenes of looting, bodies
lying in the street, and government soldiers commandeering boats
to flee across Lake Tanganyika. The local prison was also
emptied, they said.
The M23 rebels have been moving south towards Uvira, which
shares a lake border with Burundi, since they seized the
provincial capital Bukavu over the weekend - the heaviest loss
for Congo since the fall of the region's largest city Goma in
late January.
The militants' reported entry into the town of Kamanyola on
Tuesday has caused panic in Uvira, 80 km (50 miles) to the
south. Since Bukavu's fall, retreating Congolese troops have
ended up fighting allied militia called the Wazalendo who do not
want to withdraw.
"We woke up to bullets flying because of the advance of the
rebels, who are still a long way off," a local official said,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
"The forces we were counting on, the FARDC (army) and the
Wazalendo, are at odds. There are deaths and looting."
Four Uvira residents also said they heard volleys of gunfire
in the city. A humanitarian source said there were bodies lying
in the streets, around 30 bodies in the town's morgue, and more
than 100 people hospitalised with serious injuries as a result
of the violence. Reuters could not independently confirm these
figures.
Medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said clashes
and armed looting in Uvira were blocking ambulances and had
forced the charity to reduce its staff in the town.
Over 500 Congolese police officers fled across the border to
Burundi, where they were disarmed, a security source, a
diplomatic source and a local official said. The interior
ministers of Burundi and Congo did not respond to requests for
comment.
The chaos underscores the Congolese authorities' weakening
control in the east, where M23's unprecedented territorial gains
and capture of valuable mining areas have stoked fears of a
wider war.
Many soldiers were piling onto boats to escape Uvira, one
security source said, adding this was "creating unrest among
people who can't get on", with "shooting in all directions".
"The rapid and uninterrupted expansion of the conflict,
particularly in South Kivu province, continues to inflict a
heavy toll on the civilian population," top U.N. aid official in
Congo, Bruno Lemarquis, said in a statement.
PRISONERS FREED
The prison in Uvira was cleared of inmates, including 228
soldiers who had been arrested for deserting, the security
source said. It was not clear if the detainees forced their way
out of the prison or had been released.
Hopes of Congo mustering a defence against the M23's advance
have flagged with the recent withdrawal of allied Burundian
troops, sources told Reuters on Tuesday. Burundi has denied such
a pull-back.
Congo has asked Chad for military support to help fight the
M23, a Chadian official and a source at the Congolese presidency
said. Last week, Chad's Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Sabre Fadoul
told Reuters that the idea of Chad sending military support to
Congo was "pure speculation".
Meanwhile, fighting between rebels and the Congolese army
has also flared in neighbouring North Kivu province, an army
spokesperson, Mak Hazukay, said on Wednesday, adding that some
soldiers had abandoned their positions in the area, creating
panic.
The well-equipped M23 is the latest in a long line of ethnic
Tutsi-led rebel movements to emerge in Congo's volatile east,
renewing a conflict over power, ethnic rivalry and mineral
resources dating back to the 1990s genocide in neighbouring
Rwanda.
Rwanda denies allegations from Congo and the United Nations
that it supports the group with arms and troops. It says it is
defending itself against a Hutu militia, which it says is
fighting alongside the Congolese military.
Congo rejects Rwanda's complaints and says Rwanda has used
its proxy militias to loot its minerals such as coltan, used in
smartphones and computers.
The disorder in the east has fuelled a sense of worry and
panic 1,600 km (1,000 miles) away in the capital Kinshasa, where
some residents are looking to move their families abroad amid
open talk of a coup.
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