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Rwanda soldiers killed by Hutu rebels near DR Congo border, president says

Rwandan soldiers stand in formation awaiting orders after being transported to the Central African Republic, January 19, 2014. Image: US Air Force/Staff Sgt. Ryan Crane

At least two Rwandan soldiers were killed in an attack by ethnic Hutu rebels who crossed the border from the Democratic Republic of Congo, President Paul Kagame said on Friday, December 14.

The Rwandan army blamed the December 9 assault in the country’s restive east on Hutu rebel group, the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (Forces Démocratiques de Libération du Rwanda, FDLR).

“A group arrived from DRC and attacked our positions, I think they killed two or three of our soldiers,” Kagame said at a news conference.

“A number of them [the rebels] were killed and their bodies taken away by their friends in the DRC. We are seeking clarification and cooperation from the Congolese authorities,” he added.

The FDLR, formed in 2000 from two branches of the Army for the Liberation of Rwanda (Armée de Libération du Rwanda, AliR), and includes several leaders who took part in the 1994 Rwanda genocide, in which hundreds of thousands of ethnic Tutsis were slaughtered by the Hutu majority government.

Eastern DRC has been a theatre of ethnic violence for 20 years, fuelled in part by the desire to control valuable mineral resources and farmland.

The FDLR is regularly accused of atrocities on Congolese soil.

Tensions are rising in the vast, unstable country ahead of the December 23 election when Congolese voters will choose a successor to President Joseph Kabila who has remained in power as a caretaker leader even though his second and final elected term ended nearly two years ago.


With reporting from AFP

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