Four Congolese soldiers and 12 rebels have been killed in three days of clashes in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the military said on Tuesday.
The violence, which began on Sunday, pitted the army against the Congo-based Rwandan FDLR militia and two groups of Mai-Mai rebels, army spokesman Captain Guillaume Djike told AFP.
The clashes took place in Mpati, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) southwest of Goma, capital of the restive North Kivu province. Several weeks ago, police pulled out of five villages in the region which were subsequently taken over by the FDLR and the Mai-Mai, but operations were under way “to retake these illegally-occupied villages,” Djike said.
FDLR was formed in 1994 by ethnic Hutus, including perpetrators of the Rwandan
genocide of that year who fled to neighbouring DR Congo after the bloodshed.
Among its ranks are several people wanted internationally in connection with the genocide perpetrated against Tutsi in 1994. One of them, Ladislas Ntaganzwa, who was arrested in DR Congo in December, was flown to Kigali on March 20 to face trial on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity In February 2015, the Congolese army launched an offensive in a bid to flush out the FDLR rebels who are spread across the provinces of North and South Kivu as well as the northern sector of Katanga, where they have been wreaking havoc for more than two decades.
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