On Wednesday, Rwanda accused the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) government of “fabricating” a massacre that the UN claims was carried out by M23 rebels and claimed the lives of 131 people.
Kinshasa accuses its little neighbour, Rwanda, of backing the M23 (“March 23 Movement”). These allegations are refuted by Kigali, but are supported by UN, US, French, and Belgian specialists.
The eastern DRC, a difficult area with abundant mineral wealth, has recently come under the authority of the insurgency, escalating tensions with Rwanda.
Talks between the DRC and Rwanda in Angola appeared to pave the way for a truce, but Kinshasa later accused the M23 of massacring civilians in the village of Kishishe. According to a U.N. investigation, 131 people were killed there on November 29.
“The exaggerated +Kishishe massacre+, a fabrication by the DRC government which attributed it to the M23, spread rapidly without any investigation of the facts by any credible entity,” the Rwandan government said in a statement Wednesday.
- In Central African Republic, the UN says “additional efforts” are required (CAR)
- DR Congo conflict: M23 militants killed over 130 people, according to the UN
“The incident was in reality an armed confrontation between the M23 and illegal armed groups allied to the FARDC” (Congolese army), Kigali said.
“Accusing Rwanda of supporting the Congolese armed group M23 is unfair and prevents addressing the real causes of the perpetuation of the conflict in eastern DRC, as well as its impact on the security of neighboring states, including Rwanda,” the same source added.
The M23 has denied committing the massacre, citing “stray bullets” that killed only eight civilians.
Rwanda has repeatedly accused the DRC of colluding with the FDLR (Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda), a Rwandan Hutu rebel movement, some of whom were involved in the 1994 Tutsi genocide in Rwanda.
A Tutsi-majority rebel group, the M23 first made a name for itself when it took the eastern DRC city of Goma in 2012, before being driven out and going dormant.
But it took up arms again at the end of 2021, accusing the DRC of not having kept its promise to integrate its fighters into the army.