LUANDA, Angola
The Southern African Development Community (SADC) has said that it will intensify talks with the governments of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Rwanda to defeat rebels in eastern DRC.
Over the years, the two
nations have blamed each other over insecurity in eastern DRC, with Rwanda's
President Paul Kagame accusing DRC of supporting rebels opposed to his
government.
On the other hand, the DRC
accuses Rwanda of supporting the M23 rebel group, which is made up mostly of
ethnic Tutsi fighters from DRC.
The rebels claim their
government has not honoured past commitments to reintegrate them into the
national army.
On Saturday, SADC heads of
state met in Angola's capital Luanda, where they agreed on strategic guidelines
on how to deploy a peacekeeping mission to DRC.
Member states agreed to
contribute resources, including soldiers, to the mission.
During the extraordinary
summit organised to discuss the security situation in eastern DRC, SADC said it
was concerned by the escalation of hostilities in the war-hit region.
M23 rebels have occupied large
swathes of land in eastern DRC, and recently fresh fighting resumed, resulting
in deaths
and displacements of people.
SADC said the renewed fighting was a "clear violation of the ceasefire (agreement)."
The SADC member states also
mulled over the pooling of financial resources, under the SADC Peace Fund
programme, to sustain peace initiatives in eastern DRC and in other parts of
the bloc.
Election matters also took
centre stage during the SADC discussions, with the regional bloc wishing
Madagascar and DRC peaceful voting in November and December respectively.
The extraordinary summit was
attended by presidents Joao Lourenco (Angola), Felix Tshisekedi (DRC), Samia
Suluhu (Tanzania), Cyril Ramaphosa (South Africa), Hakainde Hichilema (Zambia)
and Emmerson Mnangagwa (Zimbabwe).
SADC is made up of South Africa, Angola, Botswana, DRC, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Eswatini, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
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