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UN mission deploys to DR Congo to back ceasefire process
Qatar has been mediating between Kinshasa and the M23 for several months.
UN mission deploys to DR Congo to back ceasefire process
The Southern African country has been trying to mediate a lasting ceasefire and de-escalate tensions. / Reuters
2 hours ago

The UN will soon send a mission to the Democratic Republic of Congo's volatile east to help enforce a ceasefire that has been breached despite peace agreements, mediator Qatar said Tuesday.

The announcement comes a day after a meeting in Doha between representatives of M23 fighters and envoys from Kinshasa.

Officials from the United States, the African Union, and the UN mission in the DRC (MONUSCO) were present as observers.

At the meeting, the two sides agreed on the arrangements for setting up a monitoring mechanism for a "permanent" ceasefire, the Qatari foreign ministry said in a statement.

Failed interventions

An intervention by MONUSCO was factored into agreements concluded in recent months aimed at ending the over three-decade-old conflict.

The M23 seized the major cities of Goma in January 2025 and Bukavu the following month.

Qatar has been mediating between Kinshasa and the M23 for several months. A commitment towards a ceasefire was signed in July.

In parallel, an agreement was ratified in early December in Washington by the DRC and Rwanda.

These have failed to end the fighting.

Renewed clashes

In recent days, there have been clashes near the town of Minembwe in South Kivu province, according to local sources.

According to Qatar, MONUSCO will monitor and verify a ceasefire in the city of Uvira. But no details have been given.

Uvira, a strategic city of several hundred thousand inhabitants on the border with Burundi, fell into the hands of the M23 and other allies following a swift offensive in early December.

After about 10 days, the armed group withdrew before the Congolese armed forces retook Uvira.

SOURCE:AFP