M23 group seizes key town in eastern DR Congo

M23 group seizes key town in eastern DR Congo
M23 rebels stand guard during a meeting in Goma. (File/Reuters)
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Updated 21 March 2025

M23 group seizes key town in eastern DR Congo

M23 group seizes key town in eastern DR Congo
  • Capture of Walikale leaves rebels in control of road linking 4 provinces

GOMA: Rwanda-backed M23 rebels have entered the center of the eastern Congo town of Walikale, a local activist and an M23 source said on Thursday, expanding the insurgents’ presence deep into the Congolese interior despite renewed calls for a ceasefire.

Their entry into Walikale, an area rich in minerals including tin, followed fighting on Wednesday with the Democratic Republic of Congo’s army and allied militias on the outskirts of the town.

The town’s capture would leave the rebels, who took eastern Congo’s two largest cities earlier this year, in control of a road linking four eastern Congo provinces and within 400 km of Kisangani, the country’s fourth-biggest city.

“The rebels are now visible in the city’s center,” said Fiston Misona, a civil society activist in Walikale.

“There are at least seven people wounded who are at the general hospital.”

An M23 source said the rebels were in complete control of the town.

A spokesperson for Congo’s army did not respond to requests for comment about the situation in Walikale.

The rebels’ move on Walikale, a town of about 15,000 people, came despite calls on Tuesday by Congo President Felix Tshisekedi and his Rwandan counterpart Paul Kagame for an immediate ceasefire after their first direct talks since M23 stepped up its offensive in January.

The conflict, rooted in the fallout from Rwanda’s 1994 genocide and competition for mineral riches, has quickly become eastern Congo’s worst conflict since a 1998-2003 war that drew in multiple neighboring countries.

Rwanda has been supporting the ethnic Tutsi-led rebels by providing arms and sending troops, according to the UN, Western governments, and independent experts.

Rwanda has denied backing M23 and says its military has been acting in self-defense against Congo’s army and a militia founded by some of the perpetrators of the genocide.


Dutch centrist Jetten wins election: official results

Updated 1 sec ago

Dutch centrist Jetten wins election: official results

Dutch centrist Jetten wins election: official results
THE HAGUE: The Dutch Electoral Council officially declared Rob Jetten the winner of last week’s election on Friday, setting the 38-year-old centrist on course to become the country’s youngest-ever prime minister.
Jetten scored a razor-thin victory of 29,668 votes over anti-Islam leader Geert Wilders, the council said, after an election seen as a bellwether for the rise of Europe’s far right.
“I think we’ve now shown to the rest of Europe and the world that it is possible to beat the populist movements if you campaign with a positive message for your country,” he told AFP last Friday.
Before taking the helm of the European Union’s fifth-largest economy, Jetten must first form a coalition — a process that could take months.
Under the Dutch political system, no single party receives enough seats in the 150-member parliament to govern alone, with compromise and negotiation crucial.
Jetten’s D66 centrists won 26 seats, the Electoral Council said, the lowest-ever number for an election winner. The far-right PVV led by Wilders also has 26.
A total of 15 parties won seats in parliament, including a party campaigning for animal rights and a group representing the interests of people over 50.
Although Wilders lost 11 seats compared to his shock election win in 2023, the far right remained strong in The Netherlands.
The far-right Forum for Democracy progressed from three seats to seven, while the hard-right JA21 party gained nine seats from only one in the 2023 election.

- ‘Strictest immigration policy ever’ -

Jetten’s preference is a four-way coalition bringing together parties from across the political spectrum.
He wants to work with the center-right CDA (18 seats), the right-wing liberal VVD (22 seats) and the left-wing Green/Labour grouping (20 seats).
That would give him a comfortable majority of 86 seats but VVD leader Dilan Yesilgoz has ruled out entering a coalition with Green/Labour.
Her preference is for a right-wing coalition with the CDA, JA21, and Jetten’s D66. That would have exactly 75 seats, making it potentially unstable.
Another possibility is a minority coalition, but Jetten has stressed that is not his preference.
Attempting to bridge these differences is a so-called “scout,” whose job is to work out which parties are prepared to work together.
Jetten appointed Wouter Koolmees, head of national rail firm NS, as scout to lead the haggling. He is expected to report his progress on Tuesday.
Wilders has reluctantly conceded defeat, congratulating Jetten, but also sharing baseless allegations of voting irregularity on social media.
He has offered to join the coalition, but all mainstream parties ruled out working with him even before the election.
Wilders prompted the snap election, pulling out his PVV party after complaining progress was too slow to implement the “strictest immigration policy ever.”