In this file photo taken on January 06, 2023 Colonel John Imani Nzenze (centre)- a representative of M23, meets with East African Regional Force officials during the handover ceremony at Rumangabo camp in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
The M23 has rejected the accusations contained in an Amnesty International press release accusing them of massacres and rapes in the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).In a statement issued on February 18, rebel spokesperson
Laurence Kanyuka wrote: "The Amnesty International report is based on
testimonies collected from people whose statements are not based on the
reality on the ground".
"Amnesty International's investigators never went to the
scene of the events to compare the testimonies collected with the evidence on
the ground but but are quick to draw hasty and unverified
conclusions", adds the M23.
In a statement, Amnesty International accused the
"Rwandan-backed" M23 rebels of raping dozens of women in a series of
attacks in November 2022 in the eastern DRC.
"Amnesty International bases its accusations on the testimony
of 35 victims and direct witnesses. The organisation denounces "war
crimes" which could also constitute "crimes against humanity,"
the statement says.
According to Amnesty International, at least "66 women and
girls" were raped by "the Rwandan-backed armed group M23" in the
town of Kishishe, about 100 km north of Goma, capital of North Kivu province,
the statement said.
After taking control of Kishishe, the M23 rebels "went
door-to-door, killing all the adult men they could find and subjecting dozens
of women to rape, including gang rape," Amnesty said, without specifying
the number of victims.
The M23 rebels respond that "the determination of rape cannot
be so simplistic and limited to the statements of the victims". For the
rebels, "this offence requires forensic expertise to confirm".
In November 2022, the Congolese government claimed that the M23
killed 272 civilians in Kishishe and Bambo, two villages in North Kivu, eastern
DRC. The UN has given a different version of the figures, saying that the
rebels killed 171 civilians in these two villages.
The M23 denies the death toll, arguing that only
"eight civilians were killed by stray bullets and 12 fighters with
weapons in their hands" died in the fighting.
One witness told Amnesty that he "counted up to 80 bodies of
men shot by M23 elements" in a church, the report said. The victims were
suspected to be supporters of rival armed groups, including the Democratic
Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) and the local Mai Mai.
The situation in the DRC continues to worsen, despite repeated
calls for a ceasefire from the African Union, the East African Community, the
European Union and the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region.
The M23 rebels are calling for a "direct dialogue" with
the Congolese government. But Kinshasa demands that the rebels withdraw from
conquered territories and lay down their weapons before considering talks with
the DRC government.
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