• Articles
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • الرئيسية
  • Latest News
  • News
  • Privacy Policy
  • نتائج البحث
  • Shopping
  • Site Map
  • Terms of Use
  • Lea éstos también

    • Zimbabwe elections: What you need to know
    • Children caught up in war suffer, tagged ‘collateral damage,’ UN says
    • South Sudan’s Kiir pledges country’s first election
    • Russia drones strike Kyiv, grain export route on Danube
    • Foreign observers say Zimbabwe poll not free and fair
    • Tentative truce in Libya capital after militia clashes kill 27
    • African leaders agree on vision to tap youth talent
  • Affiliate Disclaimer

    This website is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program.
  • Articles
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Shopping

Tshisekedi pegs longer stay of EACRF on M23 respecting ceasefire

Daisy I. Posted On 2023-08-30
0


0
Shares
  • Share On Facebook
  • Tweet It

The Democratic Republic of Congo has signaled it will be amenable for the longer stay of East African Community Regional Forces (EACRF as long as they can force armed groups to respect the ceasefire.

The apparent climb-down emerged on Monday as President Felix Tshisekedi hosted his Burundian counterpart Evariste Ndiyishimiye, the current Chair of the East African Community.

And the meeting saw Tshisekedi, once a bitter critic of EACRF say there has been some positive engagements with regional leaders who now see the need for permanent ceasefire as a requirement for any peace talks with armed groups.

Read:DRC banks on bilateral army deals to secure defences in eastern flank

The Congolese leader did not expressly mention the end of the EACRF’s mandate, which is supposed to expire at early September. But he did say that there is now a better response from the troop contributing countries.

“It’s true that some days back, I expressed my certain annoyance at the behaviour of the East African regional force. But time has passed and the meetings have started being much tougher on the armed groups, just like the last one (on 24 August with the Defence ministers in Nairobi in which our Deputy Prime Minister of Defence, Jean-Pierre Bemba, took part. “That meeting was much tougher on respecting the terms of the agreements reached through the Nairobi process, which is enriched by the Luanda roadmap”.

Nairobi and Luanda processes are part of a regional project to force the parties involved in the Congolese conflict to observe a ceasefire, before embarking on the road to peace.

“Time will tell if those talks can be transformed into action because decisions have been taken and these decisions apply immediately. We need to commit the M23 to respecting the terms of these processes,” said Felix Tshisekedi.

Ndayishimiye said a Summit of the heads of state will be held soon to examine DRC’s demands.

The Congolese president said his country will use that meeting to express its views on the basis of the findings, namely whether the M23 would finally be allowed to go into cantonment.

The Congolese government has always taken the view that since March this year, the M23 has not really withdrawn from the conquered areas, even though there has been no fighting with the Congolese army for nearly six months. In Kinshasa, in the final joint communique signed by the DRC and Burundi, the two heads of state say that they “note and deplore the fact that the M23 does not have the will to disengage and go to the cantonment centres.”

Ndayishimiye and Tshisekedi “appealed to the region to assume its responsibilities and force the M23 to go into cantonment”.

Read:Leaders bet on cantonment to end eastern DRC battles

Although the Congolese president was less vehement about the EACRF, he nevertheless continued to deplore the “laxity” he felt was being shown by the Eastern bloc contingents, with the exception of the Burundian troops, who he felt were more active in Kivu. Kenya, Uganda and South Sudan are the other troop contributors to the EACRF.

“We are asking the EACRF to be more active, like the Burundian contingent, because in some places we continue to observe laxity on the part of the other contingents, who authorise the collection of taxes by the M23, which is totally illegal and unacceptable,” they said.

The two leaders said that, in addition to defence and security issues, on which they committed their two countries to work together more closely, the Burundian leader had visited Kinshasa to strengthen ties of cooperation.

They agreed to speed up an integration project, namely the construction of a bridge linking the Cibitoke Province in Burundi with South Kivu in the DRC. A railway is also to be built, linking Tanzania, Burundi and the DRC. Infrastructure projects should also include a road linking Bujumbura to Uvira and then Bukavu. In the commercial sphere, the two presidents have agreed to set up banking branches in Burundi and the DRC.

Related Posts

  • Reality check on DRC with EACRF getting extension amid protestsReality check on DRC with EACRF getting extension amid protests
  • Port deal outrage sends Samia and CCM to early campaignsPort deal outrage sends Samia and CCM to early campaigns
  • DR Congo again sounds alarm over Rwanda ‘aggression’DR Congo again sounds alarm over Rwanda ‘aggression’
  • UK slaps six firms linked to Sudan warring parties with sanctionsUK slaps six firms linked to Sudan warring parties with sanctions
  • Sudan army chief visits Qatar on third trip since war beganSudan army chief visits Qatar on third trip since war began
0
Shares
  • Share On Facebook
  • Tweet It




Trending Now
SADC censures Zimbabwe over unwelcome comments on Zambia
Daisy I. 2023-09-30
Uganda announces new population census dates
Daisy I. 2023-09-30
Sudan army chief visits Egypt as deadly violence grips Darfur
Read Next

Sudan army chief visits Egypt as deadly violence grips Darfur

  • Lea éstos también

    • African leaders agree on vision to tap youth talentAfrican leaders agree on vision to tap youth talent
    • Why Somalia requested UN to delay Atmis exitWhy Somalia requested UN to delay Atmis exit
    • Zimbabwe’s new elections facing familiar old fearsZimbabwe’s new elections facing familiar old fears
    • Iran President Raisi visit to Kenya delayedIran President Raisi visit to Kenya delayed
    • South Sudan transition stuck in mud of floods, politicsSouth Sudan transition stuck in mud of floods, politics
    • It is hypocrisy: Uganda responds to World Bank funding freezeIt is hypocrisy: Uganda responds to World Bank funding freeze
    • Sudan military chief Yasir Alatta dares Kenya’s Ruto to intervene in Khartoum conflict


  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
© Este medio no es responsable del contenido sometido por sus lectores. DMCA Policy
Press enter/return to begin your search