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Massacres in eastern Congo cast doubt on U.S. mediated peace deal

M23 rebel soldiers board pickup truck in Goma on May 18, 2025.
JOSPIN MWISHA
/
AFP
M23 rebel soldiers board pickup truck in Goma on May 18, 2025.

KINSHASA, Democratic Republic of Congo — Rwandan backed M23 rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo killed 141 villagers in July, Human Rights Watch said Wednesday, despite hopes that President Trump-backed peace talks would end long-running violence in the troubled region.

The rights organization found that the rebels committed massacres in at least 14 villages in the province of North Kivu, in eastern Congo, between July 10 and 30.

The attacks targeted mostly ethnic Hutu villagers, according to Human Rights Watch, as part of an apparent military campaign by the M23 against the Hutu extremist militia Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda, or FDLR.

Eastern Congo, home to vast reserves of critical minerals, has endured armed conflict for more than three decades. The violence traces back to the aftermath of the 1994 genocide in neighboring Rwanda, when the Hutu-dominated regime collapsed and millions of people — including Hutu extremists — fled into Congo. Their arrival fueled a cycle of wars and instability that continues today. The U.N., U.S. and many regional governments say the M23 rebellion, which grew out of earlier Tutsi-led militias in the region, now operates as a proxy force for Rwanda's interests.

The scale of the recent killings in North Kivu is likely larger than reported by Human Rights Watch, which compiled a list of the people either killed or feared dead.

Referring to the same armed campaign, the U.N. announced in early August that the M23 had killed at least 319 villagers in North Kivu, citing firsthand accounts gathered by U.N. rights investigators. Rwandan soldiers reportedly took part in the M23 operations.

Both Rwanda and the M23 have disputed the UN's findings.

Congolese Tutsis lead the M23 rebellion, which began major armed operations again in late 2021 after years of dormancy, with the backing of Congo's smaller neighbor Rwanda.

Early this year, the violence escalated dramatically. M23 fighters and Rwandan troops captured eastern Congo's two largest cities Goma and Bukavu, in a lightning offensive.

With fears that the M23 was threatening to topple the Congolese government and of regional war erupting in central Africa, the Trump administration applied heavy pressure on both Congo and Rwanda to stop the fighting.

U.S. President Donald Trump sigs a letter of congratulations as he meets with Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Rwanda Olivier Nduhungirehe and the Foreign Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner in the Oval Office at the White House on June 27, 2025.
Joe Raedle / Getty Images North America
/
Getty Images North America
U.S. President Donald Trump sigs a letter of congratulations as he meets with Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Rwanda Olivier Nduhungirehe and the Foreign Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner in the Oval Office at the White House on June 27, 2025.

Congolese and Rwandan leaders signed a peace agreement on June 27 in Washington, which provides for Rwandan troops withdrawing from Congolese territory, as well as for Congolese forces dismantling the FDLR militia — which Rwanda views as an existential threat.

But since then there's been virtually no change on the ground in eastern Congo, despite President Trumps frequent claims to the contrary. Speaking as recently as Friday Trump told Fox News "I've settled wars that have gone on for 35 years, a couple of them, and, you know, the Congo and Rwanda, that was 31 years. I think, 8 million people dead with machetes. A lot of machete deaths. They walk in. The machetes are swinging all over the place. What a horrible situation. And we got it settled."

Separately, the Congolese government is also negotiating with M23 rebels. In late July, the two sides signed a so-called "declaration of principles" in Qatar's capital Doha that is meant to lead to a ceasefire and then permanent peace agreement.

Clashes between the M23 and Congolese government military have also resumed in recent weeks, raising more fears that the peace process could be derailed. On Tuesday, the Congolese army said that the M23 was committing "incessant attacks" on its positions, "in flagrant and intentional violation of the Washington peace accord and the Doha declaration of principles."

The M23, for its part, stated that the Congolese army was "carrying out systematic, criminal attacks on densely populated areas using kamikaze drones and heavy artillery."

Congo's foreign ministry also stated on Wednesday that the civilian massacres in North Kivu reported by Human Rights Watch and the U.N. "cast a grave shadow over the sincerity and commitment of stakeholders to the Washington peace agreement and the ongoing Doha talks."

Copyright 2025 NPR

Emmet Livingstone