A United Nations Security Council delegation arrived in the Democratic Republic of Congo on Thursday (March 9th) for a three-day visit, the world organization said, as violent clashes with M23 rebels continue in the Democratic Republic of Congo. east of the country.

After several announcements of cessation of hostilities remained without effect in recent months, a ceasefire was supposed to come into force on Tuesday.

The day before, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres urged the rebellion to abide by the truce, while last weekend French President Emmanuel Macron, visiting Kinshasa, threatened the parties to the conflict with sanctions. who would ignore this new deadline.

But the weapons were not silent on the appointed day in the province of North Kivu, where the M23 continued Wednesday to extend its territory.

However, no fights were reported on Thursday.

Kinshasa accuses Rwanda of supporting this rebellion, which has been corroborated by United Nations experts and denounced by several Western countries, although Kigali denies it.

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DR Congo: the ceasefire is not respected in the east of the country © capture France 24

Concerns ahead of elections

"We encourage all stakeholders to cease fire and all those who have nothing to do in the DRC to return home", Nicolas de Rivière, French ambassador to the United Nations, said on Wednesday in New York, before leaving. for Kinshasa.

"It is important to act, it is important that the armed groups, whatever they are, withdraw, that peace finally returns to the DRC", he declared to the press on the arrival of the delegation. at the airport of the DRC capital.

"We came to see how to provide solutions to the root causes of the conflicts", see also "the humanitarian crisis in the East", said his Gabonese counterpart Michel Xavier Biang.

"We are also coming into an election year (...), our message will be to encourage political actors to engage in a process of transparent, credible elections," he added.

Elections, presidential in particular, are scheduled in the DRC on December 20th.

Distrust of the UN 

In Kinshasa, the Security Council delegation will meet the authorities, including President Félix Tshisekedi, before going on Saturday and Sunday to Goma, the capital of North Kivu, a city of more than a million inhabitants. between Rwanda to the east, Lake Kivu to the south and the M23 rebels to the north and west.

The representatives of the Council intend to "assess the security and humanitarian situation in North Kivu", indicated in a press release the UN Mission in the country (Monusco), and "evaluate the context in which this force is evolving".

Present in the DRC for 23 years and still strong today with more than 16,000 men, Monusco is increasingly criticized for its inability to put an end to the violence that has been going on in the East for nearly 30 years.

"We are here to support the action of Monusco, to remind that it is part of the solution to find peace", declared the Gabonese ambassador to the UN on his arrival in Kinshasa.

>> To read also: In Africa, the UN missions "at the end of the race"

Escalation of violence

In addition to the M23, eastern Congo is plagued by violence from many other armed groups.

In the night from Wednesday to Thursday, in the north of the province of North Kivu, a new attack attributed to the ADF rebels (Allied Democratic Forces), affiliated with the jihadist group Islamic State, left more than 40 dead.

The ADF are originally mainly Muslim Ugandan rebels, who have been rooting since the mid-1990s in eastern DRC where they are accused of having massacred thousands of civilians.

In 2021, attacks on Ugandan soil were also attributed to them and a joint military operation between the Congolese and Ugandan armies was launched to hunt them down in North Kivu and in the neighboring province of Ituri.

The United States last week offered a reward of up to $5 million for any information that might lead to its leader, a Ugandan in his 40s named Musa Baluku.

With AFP

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