KAMPALA, Uganda
The Ugandan military has said it launched joint air and artillery raids with forces from the neighbouring Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) against the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) armed group.
“This morning, we have launched joint air and
artillery strikes against ADF camps with our Congolese allies,” a spokesperson
for the Uganda People’s Defence Force said in a Twitter post on Tuesday.
Ugandan authorities have blamed the ADF for
deadly suicide bombings in the capital, Kampala, earlier this month. The armed
group has been accused of carrying out dozens of attacks in the eastern DRC.
The DRC’s government on Monday had said the two
armies have been exchanging information for many months, and that no Ugandan
troops were currently in the country.
“We have not said there will be joint
operations. We have said there will be concerted actions,” spokesman Patrick
Muyaya told a news conference, without elaborating. “If there is a need to go
up a notch, we will.”
On Tuesday, Muyaya wrote on Twitter that
“targeted and concerted action with the Ugandan army started today with air
strikes and artillery fire from Uganda against positions of the terrorist ADF
in DRC”.
Locals said they heard explosions on Tuesday
morning in Watalinga territory, North Kivu province, in the borderlands of
eastern DRC.
“There is a real panic here at home, especially
because we were not informed of this situation,” resident Julien Ngandayabo
told Reuters news agency. “We have suffered too much with the ADF, who have
massacred our families. We are waiting to see if this is the solution.”
Pascal Saambili, head of the Watalinga chiefdom, said the community woke up to the sound of heavy bombardment which continued during the morning.
The ADF was founded in Uganda in 1995 and later
moved to the DRC where it is one among dozens of armed groups seeking control
over territory and mineral resources in the east of the country.
The group, which the United States has formally
linked to ISIL (ISIS), was blamed for the November
16 suicide bombings in the heart of the Ugandan capital which killed
seven people, including the three bombers, and wounded dozens more.
The November 16 attack was the third ISIL has
claimed in Uganda. It also claimed responsibility for an attack at a pork
restaurant in a suburb of Kampala on October 23 that killed a waitress while a
third attack on October 8 killed no one.
In recent days, news reports about the proposed
cross-border campaign have sparked anxiety amongst some Congolese, who recall
Uganda’s role in civil wars that ended in 2003.
The Congolese government is still seeking more
than $13bn in reparations from Uganda for its involvement in the conflict.
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