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East Congo ceasefire is troubled as rebels remain in strategic town

The de facto ceasefire that had been agreed between Congolese and Rwandan rebels in Walikale, a town located in eastern Congo, appeared to have collapsed on Monday. The rebels reneged on their promise to withdraw from the area and accused the army of breaking its own promises.

The M23 rebels are hopeful about a possible ceasefire in Walikale.

Captured last week

The hope that diplomatic efforts would be revived to end the largest conflict in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo for decades was briefly sparked.

This conflict is rooted in the long-lasting fallout of the 1994 Rwandan genocide and the competition to control mineral wealth. It has resulted in thousands of deaths, the control of two of the largest cities in eastern Congo by rebels, and the fear of an a

Wider regional war

The arrangement could have failed if, less than 48-hours after the rebels declared their intention to leave Walikale and the Congolese army replied by saying that it would not attack them.

ceasefires.

Lawrence Kanyuka is the spokesperson of M23's Congo River Alliance rebel coalition (AFC). He accused the army, and its allied militias, of failing to withdraw their attack drones.

He wrote: "This situation delays repositioning AFC/M23 troops in the zone." It should be noted that the act is a major obstacle in respecting ceasefires and compromises peace initiatives.

Requests for comments from the Army's spokespersons were not immediately responded to.

Residents of Walikale said that rebel fighters had remained in the town as early as Monday morning. This was the furthest west M23 has reached since they escalated their offensive in January.

"They haven't moved. "They are still visible at the center of town," one person said, under condition of anonymity to protect their safety.

PEACE TALKS

The Congo and rebels have failed to negotiate.

M23 withdrew from the talks after the European Union imposed sanctions on its leaders and Rwandan officials.

Angola announced on Monday it would no longer be involved in mediating the conflict, and that a new African country will take its place.

Angola's President Joao Lurenco, who is the current Chairperson of the African Union (AU), had tried to achieve a ceasefire that would last, but in a recent statement, his office stated that Angola should devote more time to the AU priorities.

Angola's government was upset last week by a meeting between Congo President Felix Tshisekedi, and his Rwandan counterpart Paul Kagame that had been arranged in suprise by Qatar's Emir. The Angolan Government said it preferred African solutions for African problems.

M23, however, said that it did not bind itself to the calls made by Tshisekedi or Kagame at this meeting.

Congo, the United Nations, and Western countries accuse Rwanda all of providing arms to ethnic Tutsi led M23.

Rwanda denies that it supports M23, and claims its military acted in self-defense against Congo's Army and a militia formed by perpetrators from the 1994 genocide.

Qatar's government issued a statement on Monday morning, just before M23 released its remarks about the ceasefire. It welcomed the developments that occurred over the weekend and called them "a positive step towards achieving peace and stability in the region."

(source: Reuters)