DRC an Rwanda tensions; Nini Mbaya na hii ng'ombe inaitwa Kagame.

[CENTER][SIZE=7]DR Congo halts RwandAir over alleged support for rebel group[/SIZE][/CENTER]

Relations between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda seemed to deteriorate Saturday after DRC barred RwandAir from the country.
Patrick Muyaya, spokesman for the Congolese government, announced that DRC has “immediately” suspended the flights, adding that a “stern warning is given to the Government of Rwanda” over its alleged involvement in the conflict in North Kivu, eastern DRC.

DRC on Wednesday accused Rwanda of supporting the M23 rebels who are currently fighting government forces in North Kivu province. Rwanda denied any involvement.
Government spokeswoman Yolande Makolo said the country has “no intention of being drawn into an internal matter of the DRC.”
The DRC summoned Vincent Karega, the Rwandan ambassador to Kinshasa, over the rebel issue.
Mr Muyaya also announced that the M23 rebel group is now “considered as a Terrorist Movement”. The M23 is therefore “excluded from the Nairobi discussion process” through which armed groups had been called to dialogue with the government to find a solution to the armed conflict in eastern DR Congo.

Sources further said that calm has been restored in eastern DRC on Friday morning even as the Congolese army announced it had pushed back the M23 rebels it was fighting in North Kivu. Chief of staff of the Congolese army, General Celestin Mbala, has since Friday been in Goma, the largest city in North Kivu, to direct military operations. Fighting in the region has forced more than 72,000 civilians to flee their villages, according to the United Nations.
[CENTER][SIZE=7]
Rwanda denies backing armed group in DRC[/SIZE][/CENTER]

Democratic Republic of Congo has accused Rwanda of backing the M23 rebel group, which the latter denied Thursday as the Congolese army clashed with the militia in the east of the vast country.

Fighting with the rebel group erupted on several fronts this week in North Kivu, a conflict-torn eastern province of DRC, which borders Rwanda.
“Suspicions are crystallising that the M23 has received support from Rwanda,” Congolese government spokesman Patrick Muyaya stated on Wednesday evening, after a crisis meeting with the prime minister.

Primarily a Congolese Tutsi group, M23 is one of more than 120 armed groups that roam eastern DRC.

It briefly captured North Kivu’s provincial capital Goma in late 2012, before the army quelled the rebellion the following year.
But M23 resumed fighting this year, accusing the Congolese government of failing to respect a 2009 agreement under which its fighters were to be incorporated into the army.

Foreign Affairs Minister Christophe Lutundula also accused Rwanda of backing the M23 and said the militia had attacked Rumangabo army camp, about 40 kilometres (25 miles) north of Goma.

“This is the height of brazenness, we cannot remain indifferent, we cannot say nothing,” he told delegates at an African Union meeting in Equatorial Guinea on Wednesday.

But Rwanda has denied involvement. Government spokeswoman Yolande Makolo said the country has “no intention of being drawn into an internal matter of the DRC”.
Clashes between the army and M23 continued near the Rumangabo camp on Thursday, local sources said.

In Goma, 50-year-old Kakule Kapitula told AFP he had come to the city because of insecurity elsewhere in the province.
“I am afraid because if they arrive, I will have nowhere to run,” he said, referring to the rebels.

DRC and Rwanda have had a strained relationship since the mass arrival in the republic of Rwandan Hutus accused of slaughtering Tutsis during the 1994 Rwanda genocide.

Kinshasa has regularly accused Rwanda of carrying out incursions into its territory and of backing armed groups there.
Relations had begun to thaw after DRC President Felix Tshisekedi took office in 2019, but the recent resurgence of M23 violence has reignited tensions.
Tensions have also risen in Goma, an ethnic melting pot with a population of about one million, on fears of escalating violence.
General Francois-Xavier Aba van Ang, a high-ranking police officer in North Kivu, on Wednesday told city residents to prepare to defend themselves with machetes, according to a video posted on social media.

Muyaya criticised the remarks as “dangerous,” however. Resorting to “machetes, hate speech, stigmatisation is extremely dangerous and should be banned,” he tweeted on Thursday. M23 also stated that it was concerned by calls to violence. “MONUSCO and the DRC government should stop this very dangerous slippage to avoid the genocide,” it stated Thursday, using an acronym to refer to the UN peacekeeping mission in the DRC. The army launched an offensive against M23 last week, after the militia apparently attacked soldiers as well as UN peacekeepers.

On Monday, Rwanda urged an investigation into an alleged rocket attack on its territory by Congolese armed forces. Fighting between M23 and DRC’s army erupted again on Tuesday north of Goma, and by Wednesday had spread to other areas of North Kivu, including the Rumangabo camp. DRC on Wednesday announced it had also requested an investigation through a regional body that monitors security incidents in Africa’s volatile Great Lakes region. It did not mention Rwanda by name, but said in a statement that shells had been fired into its territory "from the east to the west.”

In other news, ngoja uone vile the pro-kagame faction wa Kijiji watasema wakiongozwa na @Ndindu @rexxsimba @gatume @Kalenjin101 @Simiyu22
and hii fake Arab inaitwa @Bingwa Scrotum

Kagame,Kagame,Kagame…called u mara tatu mvtherfvcker…

Huyu jamaa takauja kupata mwisho mbaya sana

Akifanyiwa regime change naweza pea safe asylum Ile girrafe daughter yake nikue nakanyanga stool nikimpea diplomatic dogggy

Banyamulenge

This is where those Polish guns are headed.

Niaje @hakimoto

Swaffii mathafa…a

[ATTACH=full]441911[/ATTACH]

This b1tch is next to none…hii maneno ukipiga unatakiwa uvunje na ukuta kabisa…

[ATTACH=full]441913[/ATTACH]

Lucky bastard…yaani huyu n1gga kabahatika kinoma…ila huenda Ange akawa na vitu vya ajabu internally mchizi anavumilia tu…

Usione dem mzuri sana kwa nje,huenda akawa na coomer majanga kabisa

Kagame the warlord, warlording. The more unstable DRC is the more precious minerals he can extract from there, esp Eastern DRC. The region basically funds a good proportion of Rwanda’s budget

Kagame ako na gold refinery Rwanda. Peddling stolen gold to Europe na hakuna story za Human Rights abuse. So the powers that be allow it to happen.

[ATTACH=full]441914[/ATTACH]

Hii twiga hii…ukiipata wallah natomber mpaka mb00 ikatike kabisa

Rwanda invaded Congo to pursue militiamen . M23 are constantly equiped by foreigners who in return harvest their minerals.

Kagame is the problem in Congo.

[MEDIA=twitter]1530670775220375553[/MEDIA]

M23 are Tutsi and supported by Rwanda.

Quote:

Since their defeat in 2013, M23 fighters have periodically returned from demobilisation camps in Rwanda to stage attacks inside Congo.

U.N. investigators have in the past accused Rwanda of supporting the M23.

Hio ni propaganda… It is Rwanda that finances M23

via which port? dar or Mombasa?

Why can’t DRC work with Rwanda in routing and arresting all Hutu rebels in DRC who are a threat to Kagame then they work together to destroy all Tutsi rebels in DRC destabilising the country then they destroy all other rebels kina ADC, M23 . And live happily ever after .

DRC should stop crying wolf yet we know there are former genociders huko . Rwanda has one of the best armies in EA , if they routed rebels in Mozambique , DRC haiwezi wasumbua considering half the rebels ni wao

You don’t shit where you eat.