Congolese troops with support from Burundi’s army appeared on Friday to be holding back a push south by Rwandan-backed rebels seeking to expand their grip on eastern Congo in a weeks-old advance that has raised fears of a broader regional conflict.
Earlier this week the Tutsi-led M23 rebels seized Goma, the largest city in the east of Democratic Republic of Congo which is home to lucrative gold, coltan, and tin ore mines.
They then shifted their focus to Bukavu in neighbouring South Kivu province and made some progress toward that objective.
“We are here to defend our homeland until death.”
Kigali has rejected the findings of UN investigators that it has sent thousands of soldiers and equipment into Congo to support M23.
The UN said on Thursday that there were reports of Rwandan forces crossing into Congo in the direction of Bukavu.
Rwanda did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Well-trained and professionally armed, M23 is the latest in a long line of Rwandan-supported, Tutsi-led rebel movements to emerge in Congo’s volatile eastern borderlands in the wake of two successive wars stemming from Rwanda’s 1994 genocide.