GOMA, DR Congo
Rwanda-backed rebels claimed they captured eastern Congo's largest city, Goma, early Monday, as the United Nations described a "mass panic" among its 2 million people and Congo's government said the rebel advance was a "declaration of war."
The M23 rebels announced the
city's capture in a statement minutes before a 48-hour deadline imposed by the
group for the Congolese army to surrender their weapons expired.
In a statement, the rebels
urged residents of Goma to remain calm and for members of the Congolese
military to assemble at the central stadium.
The M23 rebels' offensive in
the heart of the mineral-rich region threatens to dramatically worsen one of
Africa's longest wars and further displace civilians. According to a United
Nations report, over a third of the population of North Kivu province where
Goma is located are currently displaced and the capture of Goma will likely
exacerbate the situation.
Late Sunday night, UN
peacekeepers began to process members of the military who had begun to
surrender on the outskirts of the city.
Congolese government spokesman
Patrick Muyaya made a statement in a video posted on X calling for the
protection of civilians and saying that the country is "in a war situation
where the news is changing."
Late Sunday, the U.N.'s
special representative for Congo told an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security
Council that with the airport shut down and roads blocked in the vast region's
humanitarian and security hub, "we are trapped."
Congo late Saturday broke off
relations with Rwanda, which has denied backing the M23 despite evidence
collected by U.N. experts and others. The surge of violence has killed at least
13 peacekeepers over the past week. And Congolese were again on the run.
The M23 has made significant
territorial gains along Congo's border with Rwanda in recent weeks, after
months of regional attempts to make peace failed. On Sunday night, the rebels
called on Congo's army to surrender their arms and present themselves at a
local stadium by 3 a.m. or they would take the city.
The Uruguayan army, who are in
Goma serving with the U.N. peacekeeping mission, said in a statement on X late
Sunday that some Congolese soldiers have laid down their weapons.
"More than a hundred
FARDC soldiers are sheltered in the facilities of the "Siempre
Presente" base awaiting the (Disarmament, Demobilization and
Reintegration) process," the statement said.
In photos shared with the
statement, armed men are seen registering with the peacekeepers in a mix of
military uniforms and civilian clothing.
The U.N. special
representative, Bintou Keita, told the Security Council that despite U.N.
peacekeepers' support for the Congolese armed forces, M23 and Rwandan forces
entered the Munigi neighborhood on Goma's outskirts, "causing mass
panic." Munigi is 9 kilometers (5 miles) from the city.
Keita said M23 fighters were
advancing and using residents "as human shields" as others fled for
their lives.
"M23 has declared the
airspace over Goma closed," she added. "In other words, we are
trapped." She said the U.N. was temporarily relocating nonessential
personnel from the city.
Congo's foreign minister,
Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner, told the Security Council that Rwanda was committing
"a frontal aggression, a declaration of war which no longer hides itself
behind diplomatic maneuvers."
Rwanda's ambassador to the
U.N., Ernest Rwamucyo, did not confirm or deny Congo's claims. He blamed
Congo's government, saying the crisis could have been been averted if it had
"demonstrated a genuine commitment to peace."
The United States and France
called for a ceasefire and appealed to Rwanda to withdraw its support to M23,
with acting U.S. Ambassador Dorothy Shea warning that the U.S. would
"consider all the tools at its disposal" to hold accountable those responsible
for sustaining the armed conflict.
In the past 48 hours, two U.N.
peacekeepers from South Africa and one from Uruguay were killed and 11 others
were injured and hospitalized, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres'
spokesman said ahead of the Security Council meeting.
The U.N. chief reiterated his
"strongest condemnation" of the M23 offensive "with the support
of the Rwanda Defense Forces," and called on the rebel group to
immediately halt all hostile action and withdraw, spokesman Stephane Dujarric
said.
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