NAIROBI, Kenya
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has urged Rwanda and Congo to de-escalate tensions and withdraw troops from their border following increased fighting that has displaced nearly seven million people.
Blinken spoke separately by
phone with Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi and Rwandan President Paul
Kagame about the "volatile situation and worsening humanitarian crisis
along the border,” the State Department said.
Its statement said Blinken
advocated for a diplomatic solution to the tensions.
Fighting between M23 rebels
and militias loyal to the Congolese army has intensified in the eastern Congo
provinces of Ituri, North and South Kivu and Tanganyika.
The Congolese government has
repeatedly accused Rwanda of supporting the M23 rebels who have taken control
over swathes of territory in eastern Congo. U.N. experts have said they had
strong evidence that Rwanda’s army was fighting alongside the rebel group.
Rwanda has rejected the accusations and instead accused Congo’s army of
shelling villages in Rwandan territory along the border.
The International Organization
for Migration has described the situation as the largest internal displacement
and humanitarian crisis in the world.
Thousands of civilians have
been killed. Millions have been displaced internally. Hundreds of thousands
have fled into neighboring Uganda.
“For decades, the Congolese
people have been living through a storm of crises,” Fabien Sambussy, IOM’s
chief of mission in Congo, said earlier. “The most recent escalation of the
conflict has uprooted more people in less time like rarely seen before."
Congo is expected to hold
presidential elections next month, but there are concerns that the escalation
of violence in the east will affect the polls in which Tshisekedi seeks another
term.
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