PARIS, France
France on Thursday called on Rwandan forces and Kigali-backed M23 rebels to withdraw from the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
Rwandan army officers lead surrendered members of the Armed Forces of the DRC (FARDC) into Rwanda |
It comes days after M23
claimed control over the key
eastern Congolese city of Goma.
Paris reiterated its
condemnation of the M23 offensive in Congo.
"The sovereignty and
territorial integrity of [Congo] are not negotiable," French Foreign
Ministry spokesperson Cristophe Lemoine said.
"The M23 must immediately
withdraw from the territories it has taken control of. Rwandan forces must
urgently leave the territory of the DRC," he said.
He said that Foreign Minister
Jean-Noel Barrot had travelled to Rwanda's capital, Kigali, after having
visited Kinshasa.
The spokesperson said that
Paris supported diplomatic
efforts by Angola and Kenya to mediate peace talks between Congo
and Rwanda.
The minister's visit comes
after protesters
stormed the French embassy and other diplomatic missions in
Congo's capital.
The M23 group pledged that it
would continue its offensive in Congo after capturing
the North Kivu provincial capital of Goma.
"We will continue the
march of liberation all the way to Kinshasa," said Corneille Nangaa, head
of a coalition of groups including M23, according to the AFP news agency and
Rwandan media.
"We are in Goma and we
will not leave... for as long as the questions for which we took up arms have
not been answered," he said.
The statement comes after
Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi vowed a "vigorous and coordinated
response" against M23 and Rwandan forces.
Also on Thursday, Rwandan
President Paul Kagame said that Kigali was ready for "confrontation"
with South Africa over Pretoria's condemnation of the M23 offensive.
13 South African soldiers, who
are present in eastern Congo as part of a UN peacekeeping, have been killed since
the escalation of hostilities last week.
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