DRC rebels demand ceasefire
2012-12-19 14:40
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Kampala - Democratic Republic of Congo's M23 rebels on
Wednesday demanded Kinshasa sign a formal ceasefire, accusing officials of
dragging out peace talks to bolster the army's position on the ground.
"The government is refusing to sign a ceasefire,"
said the rebels' political chief Jean-Marie Runiga told AFP.
"Without first signing a ceasefire agreement it is
difficult to continue with the negotiations," he added, referring to talks
which opened in the Ugandan capital earlier this month.
The talks are the latest in several bids to end a
long-running conflict that has forced more than 900 000 people in war-torn
eastern DRC from their homes.
The M23 rebels' lightning capture of the mining hub of Goma
on 20 November, eight months after the army mutineers launched an uprising
against the government, had raised fears of a wider war and a major
humanitarian crisis.
M23 fighters, largely from the ethnic Tutsi community,
pulled out of Goma 12 days later, but still control large parts of the
chronically volatile but mineral-rich east.
On Tuesday, government spokesperson Lambert Mende accused
the rebels of not fully withdrawing the 20km they had agreed to.
But Runiga in turn accused the government of stalling talks
to allow it and militia forces - such as the extremist Hutu FDLR rebels, who
the rebels accuse of being in collaboration with the army - to strengthen its
positions.
"The government is not really committed to finding a
solution through negotiations but is trying to gain more time to reinforce its
position on the ground and its alliances with groups like the FDLR," he
said.
The ceasefire heads a raft of demands the rebels have made
to the government, including a call for major political reform for the
war-weary region.