KAMPALA, Uganda
Nearly 100 police officers from the Democratic Republic of Congo fled to neighbouring Uganda over the weekend as fighting between M23 rebels and the military in Congo's east intensified, a Ugandan military spokesperson said on Monday.
The officers arrived via the
Ishasha border crossing in Kanungu district in southwestern Uganda, said Major
Kiconco Tabaro, a regional spokesperson for the Uganda People's Defence Forces.
The 98 officers arrived with
43 guns and ammunition and were subsequently disarmed.
"They were fleeing
fighting by M23 and other militias and the Congo military. There's a lot of
violence there and then there's also hunger," Tabaro said.
Over the past four days at
least 2,500 more Congolese refugees have arrived in Uganda fleeing the raging
violence across the border, he said.
"The main push factor is
the intensifying violence and insecurity," Tabaro said, adding that
pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers and young children were among the
refugees.
The M23 has been waging a
fresh insurgency in Congo's militia-plagued east since 2022. A United
Nations report seen by Reuters last month said the Ugandan army has
provided support to the Tutsi-led rebel group, a charge Uganda denies.
The UN has long accused
Uganda's neighbour Rwanda of backing the M23, which has repeatedly seized large
parts of mineral-rich eastern Congo, allegations Rwanda denied.
Efforts by Congo's military to
push back the rebels have intensified over the past year with the use of drones
and aircraft, although the rebels have still expanded territory under their
control.
In June, the M23 seized the
town of Kanyabayonga, whose location on high ground makes it a coveted
gateway to other parts of eastern Congo's North Kivu province.
Fighting in North Kivu has
driven more than 1.7 million people from their homes, taking the total number
of Congolese displaced by multiple conflicts to a record 7.2 million, according
to UN estimates.
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