Nine Congolese soldiers killed by Rwandan Hutu rebels
In Summary
- The attack by the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) happened Monday afternoon in eastern Masisi district of North Kivu.
- Since the launch of the operation five weeks ago, the army claimed to have "neutralised" a few hundred rebels.
Nine Congolese soldiers
were killed in an ambush by Rwandan Hutu rebels in the eastern
Democratic Republic of Congo, a military source said Tuesday, over a
month after the army launched a sweeping offensive against the militias.
The
attack by the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR)
happened Monday afternoon in eastern Masisi district of North Kivu, said
Major General Leo Mushale, who commands forces in the northeast of the
country.
Three officers were among the dead, including
commander of Masisi district Colonel Raphael Bawili, Mushale said at a
press conference in Goma, the capital of North Kivu.
"The enemy was able to carry out this ambush because a number of Congolese continue to collaborate with them," said the general.
"We
have not yet eradicated the FDLR but they are being neutralised by our
forces and we ask the public not to collaborate with the enemy," he
added.
In late February DR Congo forces launched a
fresh offensive against rebels active in the restive eastern provinces
of North and South Kivu.
COMMANDERS WANTED
The
FDLR, a militia of Rwandan Hutu rebels, has been active in DR Congo
since crossing over the border from Rwanda after the 1994 genocide of
Tutsi people there and the subsequent seizure of power by a Tutsi-led
rebel faction.
Some of the Hutu militia's older
commanders and soldiers are wanted by international courts for their
alleged role in the massacre, which claimed the lives of some 800,000
people in Rwanda, mainly from the Tutsi minority.
Since
the launch of the operation five weeks ago, the army claimed to have
"neutralised" a few hundred rebels, according to General Mushale, out of
a fighting force of around 2,000.
Mushale confirmed only that 13 rebels had been killed and refused to give the total number of army losses.
In
late March, the UN security council voted to cut 2,000 troops from the
20,000-strong peacekeeping force in the country, despite calls by
Kinshasa for UN troops to hand over responsibility for security to the
country's army.
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