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Sources: Congo and M23 delegations have left Doha after peace talks stagnate.

Sources: Congo and M23 delegations have left Doha after peace talks stagnate.

Sources from both camps said that the delegations representing Congo's Government and Rwanda-backed M23 Rebels left Qatar without immediate plans to return after failing to make significant progress in a ceasefire.

M23's unprecedented march since January has seen it seize the two largest cities in eastern Congo and raise fears of a regional war.

Qatar mediated a surprise meeting between the Congolese president Felix Tshisekedi, and Rwandan president Paul Kagame last month. The two leaders demanded a ceasefire during this unexpected sit-down.

The goal was to have direct talks between M23 and the Democratic Republic of Congo this month. Sources said that while both sides sent delegations, they quickly became bogged down in technical details and possible confidence-building actions such as the freeing of Congo-held prisoner accused of having links with Rwanda and M23.

Both sides have confirmed that M23 demanded the release hundreds of prisoners from the Congolese Government, but the government has refused.

They are asking too much. A government source stated that they don't control even two of the provinces.

Our justice system is independent. "Hundreds of prisoners - charges dropped, verdicts reversed - we are an independent justice system. We can't give in to every whim. Crimes were committed. "Some people will have to pay," said the source.

Sources from the M23 rebel coalition and other rebel groups said that all parties left Doha when "prerequisites", which proved to be a "stumbling-block" for substantive talks, were unsurmountable.

Source: M23 wants Tshisekedi, beyond ending legal proceedings against members of the group, to engage in a political dialog.

Tshisekedi has long refused to sit down with M23. He calls it a terrorist group.

On Wednesday, a source from the United Nations confirmed that fighting has resumed on the territory of Walikale.

M23 withdrew earlier this month from Walikale, a strategic mine hub. It described the move as a gesture of goodwill ahead of planned talks for peace with the government.

The fighting in eastern Congo has caused thousands of deaths this year and forced hundreds of thousand more people to leave their homes. (Writing and editing by Gareth Jones, Robbie Corey Boulet)

(source: Reuters)