ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia
African Union officials on Sunday appealed for an end to the growing violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a day after rebels made further progress there and Kinshasa expelled Rwanda's ambassador.
In their statement on Sunday,
the AU officials called for an immediate ceasefire.
All parties, they said, should
"respect international law, the safety and security of civilians and the
stability at the borders of all countries in the region".
The DR Congo government said
on Saturday it was expelling Kigali's envoy over what it said was Rwanda's
backing for the M23 rebels making fresh inroads in the east of the country.
Rwanda, which denies the
accusation, on Sunday expressed regret at the decision, adding that its troops
at the two countries' border were on "high alert".
The AU on Sunday urged all the
parties to engage "in a constructive dialogue" to ensure peace in the
troubled region, calling them to peace talks in Nairobi next month.
Angola's President Joao
Lourenco said he would dispatch his Foreign Minister Tete Antonio to DR Congo
to mediate the dispute.
But Kinshasa's announcement
late Saturday suggests they have lost patience with regional mediation efforts.
In recent days "a massive
arrival of elements of the Rwandan element to support the M23 terrorists"
against DR Congo's troops had been observed, said government spokesman Patrick
Muyaya.
Condemning what he described
as a "criminal and terrorist" adventure, he announced the expulsion of
Rwanda's envoy Vincent Karega.
Hours earlier, reports had
come in that the M23 rebels had seized more territory in the vast mineral-rich
DRC, prompting the UN peacekeeping mission to increase its "troop alert
level" and boost support for the army.
The longrunning dispute has
already been the object of several regional peace initiatives, including one by
the seven nations of the East African Community (EAC) coordinated by former
Kenyan president Uhuru Kenyatta.
Kenyatta said on Sunday he was
"profoundly concerned" by the escalation of conflict and the
resulting humanitarian crisis.
The EAC, he said, called for
an end to the fighting and unhindered access for aid work.
Hours after Kinshasa's
announcement late Saturday, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said he was
trying to reach both DR Congo President Felix Tshisekedi and Rwandan President
Paul Kagame.
The UN peacekeeping mission
MONUSCO meanwhile condemned the latest advance by the M23 rebels at Kiwanja and
Rutshuru in the east, saying their "indiscriminate strikes" were
hitting the civilian population.
M23, a mostly Congolese Tutsi
group, resumed fighting in late 2021 after lying dormant for years, accusing
the government of having failed to honour an agreement over the demobilisation
of its fighters.
It has since captured swathes
of territory in North Kivu, including the key town of Bunagana on the Ugandan
border in June.
Relations between Rwanda and
DR Congo have been strained since the mass arrival in the eastern DRC of Rwandan
Hutus accused of slaughtering Tutsis during the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.
Kinshasa has regularly accused
Rwanda of carrying out incursions into its territory, and of backing armed
groups there. Kigali has denied involvement. - AFP
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