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Rwanda-backed rebels move deeper into eastern Congo as UN reports executions and rapes

Rwanda-backed rebels move deeper into eastern Congo as UN reports executions and rapes
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Corneille Nangaa, leader of Alliance Fleuve Congo (AFC), a political-military movement of rebel groups including the M23, speaks during a press conference in Goma on January 30, 2025. (AFP)
Rwanda-backed rebels move deeper into eastern Congo as UN reports executions and rapes
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Corneille Nangaa, leader of Alliance Fleuve Congo (AFC), a political-military movement of rebel groups including the M23, gestures as he arrives to deliver a press conference in Goma on January 30, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 01 February 2025

Rwanda-backed rebels move deeper into eastern Congo as UN reports executions and rapes

Rwanda-backed rebels move deeper into eastern Congo as UN reports executions and rapes
  • UN spokesman says 700 people have been killed and 2,800 injured in fighting between DR Congo's army and M23 rebels in Goma and the vicinity
  • The Southern African regional bloc, of which Congo is a member, resolved Friday to maintain its peacekeeping force deployed in eastern Congo in 2023

GOMA, Congo: Rwanda-backed rebels were quickly expanding their presence in eastern Congo after capturing Goma, the region’s major city, the UN said Friday, also expressing concerns over executions it learned were carried out by the rebels following a major escalation of their yearslong rebellion.
UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the World Health Organization and its partners conducted an assessment with Congo’s government between Jan. 26-30 “and report that 700 people have been killed and 2,800 injured” in Goma and the vicinity.
“These numbers are expected to rise as more information becomes available,” he said.
The rebels were now about 60 kilometers (37 miles) from South Kivu’s provincial capital of Buakavu and “seem to be moving quite fast,” UN peacekeeping chief Jean-Pierre Lacroix said at a press briefing on Friday. M23 has captured several towns after seizing neighboring Goma, a humanitarian hub critical for many of the 6 million people displaced by the conflict.
The central African nation’s military has been weakened after it lost hundreds of personnel and foreign mercenaries surrendered to the rebels after the fall of Goma.
Goma’s capture has brought humanitarian operations to “a standstill, cutting off a vital lifeline for aid delivery across eastern (Congo),” said Rose Tchwenko, country director for Mercy Corps aid group in Congo. “The escalation of violence toward Bukavu raises fears of even greater displacement, while the breakdown of humanitarian access is leaving entire communities stranded without support.”
The Southern African regional bloc, of which Congo is a member, resolved Friday to maintain its peacekeeping force deployed in eastern Congo in 2023. The group’s chairman, Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa, called for “bold” and “decisive steps” to boost the force’s capacity. At their meeting in Zimbabwe’s capital Harare, the 16-nation bloc also pledged to work toward a ceasefire.




Leaders of the Southern African Development Community, including chairman Emmerson Mnangagwa (center), pose for a photo ahead of the group's extraordinary summit in Harare, Zimbabwe, on January 31, 2025, to discuss the escalating conflict in the eastern DR Congo. (AFP)

At the United Nations, France circulated a draft Security Council resolution to all 15 members Friday urging a halt to the current offensive in eastern Congo, the withdrawal of “foreign elements,” and a resumption of talks to achieve a cessation of hostilities, France’s UN Ambassador Nicolas De Riviere said. He expressed hope it can be adopted soon.
The M23 group is the most potent of more than 100 armed groups vying for control in Congo’s mineral-rich east, which holds vast deposits critical to much of the world’s technology. They are backed by around 4,000 troops from neighboring Rwanda, according to UN experts, far more than in 2012 when they first captured Goma for days in a conflict driven by ethnic grievances.
Observers say that unlike the rebels’ first takeover in Congo, their withdrawal could be more difficult now.
The rebels have been emboldened by Rwanda, which feels Congo is ignoring its interests in the region and failed to meet demands of previous peace agreements, according to Murithi Mutiga, program director for Africa at the Crisis Group think tank. “Ultimately, this is a failure of African mediation (because) the warning signs were always there,” said Mutiga.
Executions, rape as human rights crisis worsens
UN human rights office spokesman Jeremy Laurence spoke at a briefing on Friday about the worsening human rights crisis in the aftermath of the rebellion, including bomb strikes on at least two internally displaced persons camps that killed an unspecified number of people.
“We have also documented summary executions of at least 12 people by M23” from Jan. 26-28, Laurence said, adding that the group has also occupied schools and hospitals in the province and are subjecting civilians to forced conscription and forced labor.
Congolese forces have also been accused of sexual violence as fighting rages on in the region, Laurence said.
“We are verifying reports that 52 women were raped by Congolese troops in South Kivu, including alleged reports of gang rape,” he said.




Members of the M23 armed group arrive in a pickup truck at the compound where residents gather for a protest against the Congolese government, expressing support for the M23 armed group in Goma on January 31, 2025. (AFP)

Rebels repelled as young people volunteer to fight
An attack by the rebels in Kalehe territory, about 140 kilometers (about 85 miles) from the South Kivu provincial capital, on Thursday was repelled by security forces, said Lt. Gen. Pacifique Masunzu, who commands a key military defense zone in South Kivu.
Congolese military bases in Bukavu were being emptied on Thursday to reinforce those along the way to the provincial capital, residents have told The Associated Press.

Dujarric, the UN spokesman, said the United Nations has about 1,200 international and national staff and dependents in Bukavu. “We’re moving some people out of there as a precaution,” he said.
Hundreds of young people on Friday registered as volunteers to join military training in the provincial capital, according to Gabriel Kasanji, a local administrative officer. This follows Congolese President Félix Tshisekedi’s call on Thursday for a mass military mobilization.
As he took office on Friday as the new governor of North Kivu, which includes Goma, Maj. Gen. Somo Kakule Evariste vowed to “move as soon as possible” to Goma to restore government control.
“This is not the time for speeches,” the general said. “The flame of resistance will never be extinguished.”
A devastated Goma grapples with occasional shooting and unexploded ordnance
In Goma, UN peacekeeping chief Lacroix said “the situation remains tense and volatile, with occasional shooting continuing within the city.”
Overall, calm is gradually being restored and water and electricity have been restored in much of Goma, but the airport remains closed and the runway unusable, he said.
The UN peacekeeping force in the city, known as MONUSCO, continues to grapple with unexploded ordnance that is “a very serious obstacle to freedom of movement,” Lacroix said.
“We are going to struggle until we restore democracy,” said Corneille Nangaa, one of the political leaders of M23. “From a failed state to a modern state.”


Sellers cancel deals with Chinese oil refiner Yulong after UK sanctions, sources say

Updated 8 sec ago

Sellers cancel deals with Chinese oil refiner Yulong after UK sanctions, sources say

Sellers cancel deals with Chinese oil refiner Yulong after UK sanctions, sources say
Most of the cancelations apply to spot cargoes that were due to load after November 13, when the sanctions take effect
The decision to cancel the contracts partly stems from concerns about the ability to make payments

SINGAPORE: Several suppliers have canceled sales of Middle Eastern and Canadian oil to China’s Yulong Petrochemical after the UK imposed sanctions on the refiner, which is likely to push it to buy more Russian crude, multiple sources familiar with the deals said.
The refiner, China’s newest with a capacity of 400,000 barrels per day and one of the country’s largest single Russian oil customers, is among the entities Britain designated last week to curb Moscow’s oil revenues used to fund the Ukraine war.
Suppliers that are unwinding supply deals include European majors TotalEnergies, BP, trading house Trafigura, Chinese state trader PetroChina International and others, the sources said.
Most of the cancelations apply to spot cargoes that were due to load after November 13, when the sanctions take effect.
PetroChina International and TotalEnergies each exited transactions supplying Access Western Blend, a heavy crude exported from Canada, said two other sources, who have knowledge of those transactions.
BP declined to comment. Total, PetroChina and Yulong did not respond to requests for comment.
Trafigura had been supplying Yulong with 2 million barrels a month of Omani and Abu Dhabi Upper Zakum crude under an annual contract, said sources with knowledge of the company’s transactions with Yulong.

PIVOT TO RUSSIAN OIL
The decision to cancel the contracts partly stems from concerns about the ability to make payments as large western banks will avoid working with sanctioned entities, the sources said.
With dwindling access to non-sanctioned crude supplies, Yulong will most likely buy more Russian oil, which already accounts for about half of its intake.
“We are already hearing Yulong is moving toward running predominantly sanctioned barrels, which, similar to the sanctions impact on Nayara, may necessitate run cuts,” said Sun Jianan, an analyst with consultancy Energy Aspects.
India’s Nayara Energy, partially owned by Russian major Rosneft, has reduced its refinery runs after European Union sanctions were imposed in July.
While larger companies step away from Yulong, smaller companies without UK connections could continue dealings, said an executive whose company continues supplying Yulong and declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the matter.
Yulong buys 150,000 to 250,000 barrels per day of Russian crude, according to estimates by traders and tanker tracker Vortexa.
Most of Yulong’s Russian imports are ESPO Blend from the country’s Pacific coast that Chinese refineries favor because of the short transit period for the shipments. Recently, Yulong has also imported Urals crude from Russia’s European ports, said three traders familiar with Yulong’s procurement patterns.
It secures most of its Russian supply from dealers linked to major Russian producers, said two of those sources.
Built on a man-made island near the port of Yantai in the northeastern province of Shandong, Yulong Petrochemical is a joint venture between private aluminum firm Nanshan Group and government-backed Shandong Energy Group.

Japan nuclear sector seeks greater support in new reactor builds, lobby head says

Japan nuclear sector seeks greater support in new reactor builds, lobby head says
Updated 20 min 44 sec ago

Japan nuclear sector seeks greater support in new reactor builds, lobby head says

Japan nuclear sector seeks greater support in new reactor builds, lobby head says
  • Just 14 of the 54 nuclear plants operating in Japan before the 2011 Fukushima disaster have been brought back online
  • Takaichi has said reviving nuclear power is key to Japan’s energy security

TOKYO: Japan’s nuclear power industry wants greater support for new reactor building, including via state-run capacity auctions, under the government of newly elected pro-nuclear Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, a lobby head said on Thursday.
Just 14 of the 54 nuclear plants operating in Japan before the 2011 Fukushima disaster have been brought back online, and Takaichi has said reviving nuclear power is key to Japan’s energy security.
However, much of Japan’s nuclear focus has been on restarting shuttered reactors — the government recently extended operating lifetimes from 40 to 60 years — with just one new plant currently on the drawing board.
Hideki Masui, president of the Japan Atomic Industrial Forum (JAIF), said more support for building new reactors, a process that takes two decades in Japan, should be made available through the long-term decarbonized capacity auction (LTDA) scheme to develop new power generation.
“We should include a scheme into the LTDA which allows some kind of a fund recovery even during construction from an early stage,” Masui told Reuters.
There are no safety regulations for next-generation reactors, and operators are asking for regulatory predictability while they also seek “support for financing,” Masui said.
In July, Kansai Electric Power, Japan’s top nuclear power operator, announced surveys to build a new reactor in western Japan, the first concrete step toward building a reactor since Fukushima.
Japan aims to have nuclear power accounting for 20 percent of its electricity mix in 2040, from less than 10 percent now, with power demand from data centers reversing years of decline.
Another four idled reactors have been given initial restart permits by authorities, while eight more are undergoing safety checks and a further 10 could apply for restarts, Masui said.
“Theoretically, I think Japan can achieve its nuclear goal of 20 percent in 2040 with more than 30 reactors operating,” Masui said.


Nigerian military says kills 50 jihadists in army base raids

Nigerian military says kills 50 jihadists in army base raids
Updated 52 min 11 sec ago

Nigerian military says kills 50 jihadists in army base raids

Nigerian military says kills 50 jihadists in army base raids
  • The groups are seeking to establish a caliphate in the northeast
  • “The combined ground and air efforts resulted in the neutralization of over 50 terrorists across all the locations,” Lt. Col. Uban said

KANO, Nigeria: Nigeria’s military said on Thursday it had killed 50 militants using drones to carry out multiple attacks on army bases in the volatile northeast.
The authorities in Africa’s most populous country and one of its powerhouses, have been fighting the Boko Haram militant group and its Daesh West Africa Province (Daesh-WAP) splinter for 16 years.
The groups are seeking to establish a caliphate in the northeast.
In the early hours of Thursday, troops aided by fighter jets engaged insurgents who had launched coordinated attacks on bases in the towns of Dikwa, Mafa and Gajibo in Borno state as well as in Katarko in neighboring Yobe state, a military spokesman said in a statement.
The military did not say which faction was behind the attacks, but intelligence sources told AFP that Daesh-WAP militants were responsible.
“The combined ground and air efforts resulted in the neutralization of over 50 terrorists across all the locations,” Lt. Col. Sani Uba, a military spokesman in the northwest said in the statement.
He said several soldiers were wounded in the fighting, without giving numbers.
“Some vehicles and buildings were also gutted by fire from the terrorists’ armed drones and RPG (rocket-propelled grenade) fire during the battle, especially in Mafa and Dikwa, where a part of the defenses were momentarily breached,” he said.
Armed insurgents are increasingly using drones, often commercial models modified to drop bombs or grenades.
A resident in Mafa showed AFP videos and pictures from the area showing the charred carcasses of several trucks and said the militants had set them ablaze during the attack.
Mafa locals said the trucks were mostly laden with cement heading to Chad whose drivers had parked for the night for fear of militant attacks on the highway.
The conflict has killed more than 40,000 and displaced around two million in northeastern Nigeria.
It has spilt over into neighboring countries, prompting the creation of a regional military coalition to combat the Islamist groups.


Indonesia doubles down on ban on Israeli gymnasts as IOC halts Jakarta’s Olympic bid

Indonesia doubles down on ban on Israeli gymnasts as IOC halts Jakarta’s Olympic bid
Updated 59 min 31 sec ago

Indonesia doubles down on ban on Israeli gymnasts as IOC halts Jakarta’s Olympic bid

Indonesia doubles down on ban on Israeli gymnasts as IOC halts Jakarta’s Olympic bid
  • Court of Arbitration for Sport has upheld Indonesia’s move to ban Israeli athletes from competing in Jakarta
  • Indonesia has consistently refused to host Israeli sports delegations, including at the 1962 Asian Games

JAKARTA: The Indonesian government reaffirmed on Thursday its decision to bar Israeli gymnasts from participating in a world championship event held in Jakarta, after the International Olympic Committee said it was cutting off discussions about any potential Olympic Games bid by Indonesia.

Yusril Ihza Mahendra, Indonesia’s senior law minister, said earlier this month that the country would not grant visas for Israeli athletes competing at the Artistic Gymnastics World Championships, as part of its “commitment to supporting Palestinian independence.”

Indonesia’s ban was later upheld by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, which rejected appeals filed by the Israel Gymnastics Federation to guarantee its participation at the Jakarta event, which started on Sunday and runs through to Saturday, Oct. 25.

But the visa ban for Israelis sparked concerns for the IOC, leading to its executive board announcing on Wednesday that it was ending “any form of dialogue” with Indonesia about hosting future Olympic events, until Jakarta guarantees “that it will allow access to the country for all participants, regardless of nationality, to attend.”

The IOC also recommended global sports federations to cease holding events in the Southeast Asian country.

Indonesia, which has an active bid to host the 2036 summer games, understood the consequences of its decision, said Sports Minister Erick Thohir.

“Our decision is in line with applicable laws and regulations. This principle is also based on the 1945 constitution, which respects public order and security, as well as Indonesia’s obligation to uphold world order,” he wrote on X on Thursday.

“On that basis, Indonesia took steps to prevent the Israeli delegation from coming to the Gymnastics World Championships … Indonesia will continue to play an active role in various sports events at the Southeast Asian, Asian and global levels, so that Indonesian sports can serve as an ambassador and a reflection of the nation’s strength in the eyes of the world.”

The world’s most populous Muslim-majority country has long been a staunch supporter of Palestinians. It has no diplomatic ties with Israel, as the Indonesian government and people see Palestinian statehood as being mandated by their own constitution, which calls for the abolition of colonialism.

“The minister’s response is proof of the government’s consistent commitment to uphold our constitutional mandate … It also safeguards the nation’s sentiment, which strongly stands with the people of Palestine, especially during the ongoing genocide,” Muhammad Anshorullah, who heads the executive committee of the Jakarta-based Aqsa Working Group, told Arab News.

“I believe that hosting the Olympics isn’t the only way to boost our national sports, economy and tourism. What’s more important is to adhere to our constitution and fight against the Israeli Zionist’s occupation, a fight that is above everything else and one that we must not sacrifice for any other interest.” 

Indonesia has consistently refused to host Israeli sports delegations, including in 1962 when Israel was denied entry to compete in the Asian Games held in Jakarta.

Indonesia was stripped of hosting rights for soccer’s Under-20 World Cup in 2023, only two months before the scheduled start of the tournament, following strong opposition and outrage from regional leaders and politicians against Israel’s participation.


US strikes 2 more alleged drug-carrying boats, this time in the Pacific Ocean

US strikes 2 more alleged drug-carrying boats, this time in the Pacific Ocean
Updated 23 October 2025

US strikes 2 more alleged drug-carrying boats, this time in the Pacific Ocean

US strikes 2 more alleged drug-carrying boats, this time in the Pacific Ocean
  • It followed another strike Tuesday night, also in the eastern Pacific
  • They bring the death toll to at least 37 from attacks that began last month

WASHINGTON: The US military on Wednesday launched its ninth strike against an alleged drug-carrying vessel, killing three people in the eastern Pacific Ocean, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said, expanding the Trump administration’s campaign against drug trafficking in South America.


It followed another strike Tuesday night, also in the eastern Pacific, that killed two people, Hegseth posted on social media hours earlier.
The attacks were departures from the seven previous US strikes that had targeted vessels in the Caribbean Sea.
They bring the death toll to at least 37 from attacks that began last month.
The strikes represent an expansion of the military’s targeting area as well as a shift to the waters off South America, where much of the cocaine from the world’s largest producers is smuggled.
Hegseth’s social media posts also drew a direct comparison between the war on terrorism that the US declared after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and the Trump administration’s crackdown.