Posted Friday, May 24 2013 at 03:34
UN chief Ban Ki-moon pledged Thursday that UN
troops will be in place within "one or two months" to battle armed
rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo's volatile east, as he toured
the flashpoint city of Goma.
Ban's visit came after three days of sometimes
deadly fighting between rebels and government forces that ended a
precarious calm spell in the mineral-rich east of the country, an area
gripped by conflict for more than two decades.
The latest bout of fighting near Goma, which was
briefly seized by the M23 rebel group in an armed uprising last year
despite the presence of a large UN peacekeeping force, has sent
thousands of people fleeing.
The UN said shelling in Goma killed three people
and wounded 10 on the eve of Ban's visit but the Congolese army and
rebel forces said the situation on the ground was calm on Thursday.
Ban later travelled to Kigali, capital of
neighbouring Rwanda, a nation that plays a key role in the region, and
has been accused by the UN of backing M23 fighters, claims it denies.
Ban had said earlier this week that deployment of a
UN intervention force made up of about 3,000 African troops should be
accelerated in view of the fresh unrest.
On Thursday, the UN chief gave a firmer deadline, saying: "It will arrive (in) about one or two months."
The force made up of Tanzanian, Malawian and South
African soldiers was approved by the UN Security Council in March as
its first ever "offensive" peacekeeping brigade.
It will join the 17,000-strong peacekeeping force
-- the biggest currently deployed in the world by the UN -- already in
place in DR Congo, but it will have an additional mandate of fighting
and disarming the rebels.
The latest unrest was unleashed barely a week
after the first troops from the UN "offensive" brigade arrived in the
east, an area rich in minerals including gold and coltan, which is used
in cell phones and other electronic equipment.
Both Kinshasa and the M23 have accused each other
of launching hostilities and trying to scupper peace efforts in the
restive east.
The rebels had earlier announced a "cessation of hostilities" for Ban's visit.
The government said Tuesday that 19 people had been killed on Monday.
World Bank president Jim Yong Kim, who is
accompanying Ban on the regional tour, on Wednesday pledged $1 billion
in aid as part of a UN-brokered accord aimed at bringing peace and
stability to the region.
"We believe it offers the best hope for peace in a
generation," Ban said of the agreement signed by 11 regional countries
in February after the M23 uprising.
"But that agreement must translate into concrete
actions," he said after meeting Congolese President Joseph Kabila at the
start of his regional tour, that will also take him to Uganda and onto
an African Union summit meeting in Ethiopia.
In Goma, Ban visited a hospital which mainly
treats victims of sexual abuse, and where a small group of protesters
gathered voicing opposition to stalled peace talks in the Ugandan
capital Kampala.
Despite its vast mineral wealth, the DR Congo -- which covers an
area roughly the size of western Europe -- is ranked by the UN as the
world's least developed and has been devastated by some of Africa's
deadliest wars.
The M23 rebellion in the east last year, which led
to the brief capture of Goma in November, threatened to drag the region
into a fresh fully-fledged war amid claims by the United Nations and
Kinshasa that Rwanda and Uganda are backing the M23.
Regional and international diplomatic pressure forced peace talks on the warring parties but fresh fighting broke out on Monday.
The UN's refugee agency said the fighting, had forced around 30,000 displaced civilians to flee temporary shelters.
The M23 -- a largely ethnic Tutsi group of former
army defectors -- has vowed to retaliate if attacked by UN troops but
said it does not intend to retake Goma.
The UN has accused the M23 of a string of rights
abuses including arbitrary executions, forced disappearances, degrading
treatment and rape of civilians.
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