• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Heavy fighting threatens East Congo peace deal

KINSHASA
Thu Aug 28, 2008 6:56pm EDT
Rebel fighters loyal to renegade Congolese General Laurent Nkunda in Mushake village, west of Goma town, Democratic Republic of Congo, December 13, 2007. REUTERS/James Akena

KINSHASA (Reuters) - Government forces fought Tutsi rebels on Thursday in the fiercest clashes for months in eastern Congo, threatening a struggling peace process, the defence minister said on Thursday.

World

Mortar fire erupted between rebels loyal to renegade Tutsi General Laurent Nkunda and government soldiers in North Kivu province on Thursday morning, Congo's United Nations peacekeeping mission said.

The clashes were among the worst outbreaks of direct fighting between the rebels and the army since Congo signed a peace deal with more than a dozen armed groups in North and South Kivu provinces in January.

North and South Kivu account for at least 80 percent of Congo's production of cassiterite, a tin ore.

"Everybody's known for weeks that Nkunda was preparing to attack, Defence Minister Chikez Diemu said

He feared the fighting could endanger the already fragile peace agreement.

"(Nkunda) is playing a dangerous game. He's playing with fire, and he's going to get burned," he said

Colonel Marc Kalongi, a commander for Nkunda's rebel forces, blamed the army for starting Thursday's clashes in the Rutshuru area north of North Kivu's provincial capital Goma.

"Government forces attacked all of our positions in Rutshuru. For months the government has been carrying out maneuvers to prepare this attack," he said.

Kalongi said rebel positions were still being bombarded by government artillery in the afternoon. No reports of casualties were immediately available.

The U.N. mission appealed for both sides to return to their original positions.

The January peace accord, a U.S. and EU-backed attempt to end a year of sporadic violence and draw a line under a conflict that has continued despite the end of Congo's broader 1998-2003 war, has struggled since the very beginning.

The U.N. estimates some 857,000 North Kivu residents have been forced to flee their homes since fighting broke out between Nkunda and government soldiers in December 2006.

(Editing by Daniel Magnowski and Angus MacSwan)



More from Reuters

Photo

Tech solutions to climate change

Experts say there is no single answer to solving global warming, but a handful of technologies could be promising. Check out some of the candidates and join the debate.  Full Article 

    Kenneth Feinberg, special master of executive compensation in the Troubled Asset Relief Program at the Treasury, speaks in Washington November 2, 2009. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

    Pay cuts, round two

    Pay czar Kenneth Feinberg cracked the whip in his latest round of compensation rulings, slimming the salaries of top-tier earners at bailed-out companies.  Full Article 

     The share price index DAX board is seen in front of an emergency exit sign at Frankfurt's stock exchange, October 8, 2008. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach

    "Deflation is with us"

    Fear of the market abyss has faded for investors, but another fear is lurking on the horizon, if not already here.  Full Article