M23 rebels have clashed with soldiers on two fronts in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo [DRC], officials said, despite a regional ceasefire deal due to take effect the same day.
After several days of relative calm, fighting erupted on Monday in the flashpoint province of North Kivu, leaving several civilians dead and wounded, hospital sources and aid workers said.
The fighting continued on Tuesday, with the rebels seizing new villages, despite a ceasefire brokered by Angola last week that was due to start at noon [1000 GMT].
A security source, who declined to be named, said on Tuesday morning that Karuba, about 30 kilometres west of Goma, “has just fallen into rebel hands”.
“We attacked them in the night but this morning they launched a counterattack, and, at the moment, the fighting is continuing,” the source added.
Witnesses said fighting continued to the north too, where rebels remained on the offensive.
The renewed fighting coincided with an urgent appeal by UN chief Antonio Guterres on Monday for the M23 rebels to honour the ceasefire and move towards fully withdrawing from the conflict-ridden country.
The fighting in Karuba since Monday has killed six and left at least 10 injured, Folo Ombeni, deputy head of a local civil society group, said.
Another civil society representative, Leopold Muisha from the Kamuronza district on the western outskirts of Goma, said rebels had shelled civilians.
“Seven bombs were fired on Monday in the late afternoon, killing two civilians, including a 12-year-old child, and injuring six others,” he said in a statement.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) also reported a child had been killed and 12 people injured in the bombardment.
On March 3, the Angolan presidency — which is mediating the conflict — announced a ceasefire for eastern DRC due to take effect at noon on Tuesday.
The seven-nation East African Community (EAC) has created a military force to stabilise eastern DRC, with the first troops arriving in Goma in November.
The announcement followed several other failed regional peace initiatives.
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‘Huge damage’
Despite the clashes, the M23 rebels in a statement on Tuesday announced what they called “an effective ceasefire” at midday “to open the way for direct dialogue with the Kinshasa government”.
Both sides accuse the other of triggering the fresh round of clashes.
M23 spokesperson Willy Ngoma told the AFP news agency that the group was defending itself after the army attacked all its positions simultaneously.
Lieutenant-Colonel Guillaume Ndjike, the army’s spokesperson in North Kivu, condemned “an umpteenth violation not only of the ceasefire but also of international humanitarian law by the Rwandan army under the guise of the M23”.
He also accused them of firing on the area of Sake, 20 kilometres west of Goma, directing the shots at a base of the UN mission in the country, MONUSCO, and a recently deployed Burundian contingent of an East African regional military force.
He said the rebel attack also targeted a camp for displaced people and the area of Mubambiro, also 20 kilometres west of Goma, causing “huge damage”.
The DRC accuses Rwanda of backing the rebels, who have displaced over half a million people in their long campaign.
Independent UN experts, the United States, as well as several other western states, agree with the assessment, although Rwanda strongly denies it.
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