M23 leader in Uganda for talks

The rebels captured Goma, the main city in DRC’s east, last week and took the key town of Sake 20km to the west the next day.

“General Makenga Sultani is travelling to Kampala to meet the other chief of staff,” Amani Kabasha, an M23 spokesman, told Al Jazeera yesterday.

DRC President Joseph Kabila, met M23 for the first time at the weekend after a summit in Kampala where regional leaders gave the rebels two days to leave Goma, which the rebels seized last week after UN-backed government troops melted away.

The DRC government said it would not negotiate with the rebels until they pulled out of Goma, but the rebels said the government was in no position to set conditions on peace talks.

Bishop Jean-Marie Runiga Lugerero, political leader of M23, said that a pullout from Goma could not be a precondition for talks with the government.

Al Jazeera’s Nazanine Moshiri, reporting from Goma, said that the M23 spokesman told her that withdrawing from Goma was not an issue.

“He said it was an issue for many regional powers, and also for the United Nations and the US who have called for the M23 to withdraw,” our correspondent said.

“It does seem now there is an uneasy stalemate between these two sides. We have the Congolese army amassing in Monova, and we have the M23 saying they’re going to stay here in Goma.”

The Ugandan military said it could not immediately confirm Makenga’s visit but that it was probable since Uganda’s chief of defence forces, Aronda Nyakayirima, was apparently co-ordinating M23’s withdrawal.

“I am not aware of his arrival but I wouldn’t be surprised if he were here because meetings have been going on and since Aronda has been tasked to co-ordinate the withdrawal [from Goma], he would need to talk to him (Makenga),” Felix Kulayigye, military spokesman, said.

A diplomat said the African Union was due to hold a Peace and Security Council meeting later yesterday to discuss the crisis.

The M23 was launched by former fighters from the Tutsi ethnic group, the minority group that inhabits both Rwanda and DR Congo and to which Kagame belongs.

The rebels were integrated into the military under a 23 March, 2009 peace deal from which their name is derived. The mutineers say the terms of that deal were never fully implemented.

The fighting has created a humanitarian crisis, forcing tens of thousands of people to flee, amid persistent reports that the M23 rebels have carried out atrocities against local people.—Al Jazeera.

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