AFP12 August 2025 | 3:59

Combat resumes between M23, Congo army in east DRC

Violent combat has broken out between the Congolese army and the M23 armed group in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo despite a peace treaty, security and local sources told AFP on Monday.

Combat resumes between M23, Congo army in east DRC

Residents walk next to a vehicle with M23 fighters on in Bukavu on 16 February 2025. M23 fighters and Rwandan troops entered the DR Congo provincial capital of Bukavu on 14 February 2025, security and humanitarian sources said. Picture: Amani Alimasi/AFP

BUKAVU - Violent combat has broken out between the Congolese army and the M23 armed group in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo despite a peace treaty, security and local sources told AFP on Monday.

Kinshasa and the M23 signed a declaration of principles on 19 July, in which they committed to a permanent ceasefire, following the signing of a peace agreement between the DRC and Rwanda in late June.

However, these accords have not stopped the violence, and fighting between Rwanda-backed M23 and local groups affiliated with Kinshasa has intensified since Friday around the town of Mulamba, in South Kivu province.

The M23 pushed back militiamen and Congolese Armed Forces (FARDC) soldiers present in the area after clashes involving heavy and light weapons, according to local and security sources.

On Sunday, both sides sent in reinforcements, the sources reported.

Fighting was still ongoing Monday around Mulamba, a town located about 80 kilometres (50 miles) southwest of Bukavu, the provincial capital.

"Both forces are using heavy weapons" and "bombs are being fired in all directions at Mulamba," said a resident contacted by telephone by AFP on Monday.

Neither side has provided any casualty figures.

In a statement Monday, M23 spokesperson Lawrence Kanyuka accused Kinshasa of conducting "offensive military maneuvers with a view to a large-scale conflict."

Since its resurgence in 2021, M23 has seized large swathes of territory in resource-rich eastern DRC, including the major cities of Goma in January and Bukavu in February.

More than two million people have fled violence in the east since January, according to a report by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs published in late July.