
Violence erupts in mineral-rich DR Congo as rebels move into key city. Here's what we know
A rebel alliance claimed the capture of the biggest city in the Democratic Republic of Congo's mineral-rich eastern region this week, pushing back against resistance from government troops backed by regional and UN intervention forces.
The takeover of Goma is yet another territorial gain for the Alliance Fleuve Congo (AFC) rebel coalition, which includes the M23 armed group – sanctioned by the United States and the United Nations.
It is also a swift expansion of the alliance's foothold across swathes of eastern DR Congo – where rare minerals crucial to the production of phones and computers are mined – and is likely to worsen a long-running humanitarian crisis in the region.
'AFC-M23 controls Goma,' Victor Tesongo, an AFC spokesperson, told CNN Monday, adding that 'Goma fell under pressure' after the group's earlier seizure of the nearby towns of Minova and Saké.
The Congolese government has yet to confirm the rebels' takeover but acknowledges their presence in the city, capital of the eastern North Kivu province. It announced Sunday it had cut diplomatic ties with neighboring Rwanda, which it accuses of equipping the group with both weapons and troops, and recalled its diplomatic staff from the nation. A Rwandan government spokesperson did not deny or confirm the country's support for M23 when asked by CNN.
More than a dozen foreign peacekeepers, as well as the military governor of North Kivu province, have been killed in recent days trying to fend off the rebels, as thousands of locals flee their advance into Goma.
South Africa's military confirmed Tuesday that four more South African soldiers deployed in DR Congo as part of the UN peacekeeping mission there had died, only days after nine were killed in the fighting.
Meanwhile, aid agencies said that hospitals were overwhelmed as hundreds of people caught in the crossfire in Goma sought treatment for injuries, among them seriously wounded children.
There were 'many dead bodies' in the city's streets, said Jens Laerke, a spokesperson for the UN humanitarian office. Fighters had reportedly raped civilians, and property had also been looted, he said. Among those killed was a famed Congolese boxer, Balezi Bagunda, according to Matthew Leutwyler, the founder of the non-profit We Are Limitless, who had been working with him to evacuate local children the organization works with.
Meanwhile, in the national capital, Kinshasa, protesters gathered and fires were lit outside a number of Western and African embassies, including that of Rwanda. The French embassy was 'attacked and firebombed,' the French foreign ministry told CNN, but protesters were unable to enter the site's perimeter.
Reports emerged Monday of Congolese troops exchanging fire with Rwandan soldiers along their shared border as fear of a blown-out war grows.
Earlier that day, gunfire rang out from Goma's airport after it was shut by the rebels; a French intelligence source told CNN M23 had gained full control of the facility on Tuesday. At the same time, more than 4,000 prisoners broke free from a correctional facility, the UN-funded Radio Okapi reported, compounding chaotic scenes witnessed in the city.
In a statement Monday, the Uruguayan army, whose troops are part of the UN peacekeeping mission in Goma, said 'hundreds' of Congolese soldiers had laid down their weapons following a 48-hour ultimatum by M23.
Rwandan national broadcaster also shared footage of Congolese soldiers surrendering their arms to Rwandan forces at a Rwandan border post after fleeing Goma.
DR Congo has experienced decades of militia violence, including armed rebellion by M23, which claims to defend the interest of the minority Rwandophone communities, including the Tutsi.
Since 2022, M23 has waged a renewed rebellion against the Congolese government, occupying a large expanse in North Kivu, which borders Rwanda and Uganda.
For several months, the rebels have also controlled Rubaya, a mining town in North Kivu that harbors one of the world's largest coltan deposits. This valuable mineral is used in the production of mobile phones.
Bintou Keita, who heads the UN mission in DR Congo, told the Security Council in a September briefing that 'competition over exploitation and trade of natural resources' had escalated conflict between armed groups in the country's east.
According to Keita, coltan trade from the M23-controlled Rubaya mining site is estimated to 'supply over 15 percent of global tantalum production', and 'generates an estimated $300,000 in revenue per month to the armed group.'
M23 denied these claims, insisting its presence in the Rubaya area was 'solely humanitarian.'
A report by the UN Group of Experts on the Democratic Republic of Congo, released in December, revealed that 'at least 150 tons of coltan were fraudulently exported to Rwanda and mixed with Rwandan production.'
Since April last year, the report said, M23, 'with RDF (Rwanda Defence Force) support, has made significant territorial gains and strengthened control over occupied areas,' adding that such a pattern suggested 'that the true objective of M23 remained territorial expansion and the long-term occupation and exploitation of conquered territories.'
The report added that the RDF's military interventions 'were critical to the impressive territorial expansion achieved' by M23.
Goma is home to around two million people and is the largest city in North Kivu. M23's incursion on Monday was the second time the group had moved to capture the provincial capital after it briefly took control in 2012.
M23 spokesman Willy Ngoma told CNN on Saturday that his group was motivated by concern for the residents of Goma, which is home to minority groups such as the Congolese Tutsi community.
'We do not want to capture Goma but to liberate it,' he said. 'The population is in distress; we must save it as quickly as possible.'
Prof. Dady Saleh, a Congolese political and economic analyst, told CNN there was more to M23's interest in Goma.
'Goma is a strategic and highly symbolic city with an international airport, as well as proximity to Rwanda and Lake Kivu, opening the easy path with South Kivu,' he said.
But, most importantly, Saleh said, Goma's fall to M23 'will be the symbol of its complete and total capture' of the eastern part of the DRC.'
M23's self-proclaimed liberation agenda has been scarred by a long trail of alleged human rights violations and what rights group Human Rights Watch described in 2023 as 'war crimes against civilians' in North Kivu. The group has consistently denied such claims.
Fighting between M23, Congolese forces and other rebel groups has also forced many from their homes in the country's east, with at least 400,000 people displaced just since the beginning of this year in North and South Kivu, the UN's refugee agency, UNHCR said in a statement.
UNHCR spokesperson Matt Saltmarsh added that 'bombs have fallen' on camps housing those who've fled, resulting in civilian deaths, including of children.
This is a huge concern for aid groups operating in the area, such as Mercy Corps. Its country director for DR Congo, Rose Tchwenko, told CNN in a statement that Goma, which she described as a 'lifeline of humanitarian operations across eastern DRC' was now 'perilously close to breaking.'
'Humanitarian access is nearly impossible, resources are stretched to their limits, and displaced families are left in dire need of food, clean water, medicine, and shelter,' Tchwenko said.
UN experts believe that an estimated 3,000 Rwandan soldiers operate alongside M23 fighters in eastern DR Congo, outnumbering the rebel group's number in the country.
According to Saleh, the Congolese analyst, Rwanda does not just support M23, 'it (Rwanda) is the M23.'
Western nations, such as the US, Britain, and France, have censured Kigali's support for the group.
Rwanda government spokesperson Yolande Makolo told CNN that her country 'will do what is necessary to defend our borders and protect Rwandans.'
She cited a UN report that found evidence DR Congo's military had collaborated and carried out joint operations with a Hutu militia group against a mainly Tutsi rebel group, the CNDP, which M23 grew out of.
Hutu militias carried out the genocide of Tutsis and moderate Hutus in Rwanda in 1994.
'This is happening right next to our border,' Makolo said of the insecurity in eastern DR Congo, adding that 'the President of the DRC has said publicly that his enemy is President (Paul) Kagame and the Rwandan Government, and that he will 'liberate' Rwandans.'
Rwanda's foreign ministry also blamed DR Congo's government for failing to engage in dialogue with M23, describing it as a 'Congolese rebel group fighting to protect their community in eastern DRC.'
CNN has contacted the Congolese military and government spokesperson for comment on the country's alleged collaboration with the Hutu militia group and threats against Rwanda.
Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi has previously threatened to go to war with Rwanda. Rwandan leader Kagame has responded in kind.
'We are ready to fight,' Kagame told French network France 24 in June last year, adding: 'We are not afraid of anything.'
When the UN Security Council convened on Sunday for an emergency meeting on the crisis, DR Congo's foreign minister Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner said Rwanda's role in the conflict was 'a declaration of war that no longer hides itself behind diplomatic maneuvers.'
Eastern African leaders plan to convene an emergency meeting within 48 hours to find solutions to the crisis, Kenya's President William Ruto said Monday, urging Tshisekedi and Kagame 'to heed the call for peace.'
Previous interventions led by Angola, including truce agreements, have failed to cease hostilities.
'A solution is still in sight,'Saleh told CNN, especially if the leaders meet as planned.
'But it is rather the quality of the solutions in sight that is the real question,' he said.
'The region needs a lasting solution to the security situation, and to achieve this, one of the conditions is that the DRC must be able to ensure its security and control its economy. Solutions in terms of power-sharing, tribal and ethnic integration are not a lasting solution.'
CNN's Cat Nicholls, Joseph Ataman, Saskya Vandoorne and Serene Nourrisson contributed to this report.

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