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After EU sanctions, M23 rebels withdraw from peace talks with Congo

After EU sanctions, M23 rebels withdraw from peace talks with Congo

The Rwanda-backed M23 Rebels pulled out of the peace talks on Monday with the Democratic Republic of Congo government, less than 24 hours prior to the meeting of the warring parties of the worst conflict of the eastern Congo in decades in Angola.

M23, a rebel group that is part of the alliance, announced it would withdraw from the first direct talks between the two parties due to sanctions the European Union had imposed against M23 earlier in the day.

In a press release, the Congo River Alliance stated that the EU was attempting to "obstruct the much anticipated talks".

M23 demanded direct talks with the Kinshasa Government for years, but Congo President Felix Tshisekedi refused, saying that M23 was a Rwandan front.

Reverse his position

On Sunday, he agreed to send a delegation to Luanda as a response to his Angolan ally's prodding and a series battlefield setbacks.

Tina Salama said that after the M23 withdrew, the government delegation was going to Luanda.

She said, "We confirm that we will be participating at the invitation of mediators."

Since January, the conflict has spiralled out of control. It is caused by the aftermath of Rwanda's genocide in 1994 and competition over mineral resources.

M23 fighters have taken control of eastern Congo's largest cities. Thousands of people have been killed, and hundreds of thousands have been forced to flee their homes.

The United Nations, as well as other international powers, accuse Rwandan of sending troops to fight alongside the ethnic Tutsi led M23. Rwanda claims its forces are defending themselves against the Congolese army and other militias hostile towards Kigali.

Sanctions

The European Union's sanctions against the M23 and Rwanda were among the most extensive since the rebels began their offensive earlier this year.

Zobel Behalal is a senior expert with the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime. He said that they had been notable for going after Rwanda’s mines board as well as a gold refinery.

Behalal said that "the EU sanctions... are a acknowledgement that Rwanda's involvement is primarily motivated by the profits it makes from its natural resources."

The Rwandan government spokesperson, mines board, and gold refinery have not responded to requests for comment.

The M23's Congo River Alliance stated that international actors have taken an "incomprehensible, ambiguous position."

It said that "Successive Sanctions imposed on members of our organization, including those implemented on the eve before the Luanda talks, severely undermine the direct dialogue, and make any possible progress impossible."

Rwanda attacked Belgium earlier in the day for calling for tough EU action against Kigali.

The Belgian diplomatic corps was given 48 hours notice to leave.

The Foreign Ministry accused Belgium, a former colonial power of Rwanda and Congo, "of using lies and manipulation in order to achieve an unjustified hostility towards Rwanda."

Maxime Prevot, Belgium's Minister of Foreign Affairs, said that Brussels would respond by declaring Rwandan diplomatic personnel persona non-grata. He called Kigali’s action "disproportionate". (Reporting from Congo newsroom, Additional reporting by Anait Miridzhanian, Writing by Robbie Corey Boulet and Aaron Ross and Editing by Andrew Cawthorne William Maclean Sharon Singleton

(source: Reuters)