Catholic Church leads peace marches against DR Congo rebel violence

Dec 05, 2022

Clutching rosaries, crucifixes and banners and singing religious songs, demonstrators of all ages heeded the call by the Church to oppose the "aggression" in the troubled east.

Soldiers of the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of Congo (FARDC) are seen on a patrol vehicle in Beni on December 3, 2022. (AFP Photp)

AFP .
@New Vision

CATHOLIC | CHURCH | VIOLENCE

KINSHASA - Peace marches organised by the Catholic Church took place across the DR Congo today, December 4, 2022, to protest violence in the country's east, days after an alleged massacre of civilians.

Protesters chanted slogans such as "No to the international community's hypocrisy" and "No to the balkanisation of DR Congo" at rallies in the capital Kinshasa and other towns.

Clutching rosaries, crucifixes and banners and singing religious songs, demonstrators of all ages heeded the call by the Church to oppose the "aggression" in the troubled east.

However, a march planned for the key eastern city of Goma, on the border with Rwanda, was called off to avoid "a possible infiltration".

The government has said that the death toll from an alleged massacre of civilians in the east last week runs to "more than 100".

It has accused the M23 militia -- with whom it is locked in a months-long conflict -- of the killings at Kishishe, a village around 70 kilometres (40 miles) north of Goma.

The M23 over the weekend again denied it was responsible, after already calling the allegations "baseless".

However, its leader Bertrand Bisimwa said in a statement that eight civilians had been killed by "stray bullets" during clashes in the village on Tuesday.

The March 23 movement, or M23, is a predominantly Congolese Tutsi rebel group that was dormant for years.

It took up arms again in November last year and seized the town of Bunagana on the border with Uganda in June.

After a brief period of calm, it went on the offensive again in October, greatly extending the territory under its control and advancing towards Goma.

Kinshasa accuses its smaller neighbour Rwanda of supporting M23, something that UN experts and US officials have also pointed to in recent months. Kigali denies the charge.

Talks between the two countries in the Angolan capital Luanda unlocked a truce agreement on November 23.

The ceasefire was scheduled to take effect on November 25. It should also have been followed by a pullout by the M23 two days later from the territory it had seized, but this did not happen.

The DR Congo army, in its accusations on Thursday, also said the M23 had breached the ceasefire with government troops, a charge that the group also denied.

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