U.N. Says DR Congo Rebels Impose 'Unacceptable' Curfew

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M23 rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo are enforcing a curfew in areas under their control, the U.N. peacekeeping mission said Wednesday, calling the move "completely unacceptable".

MONUSCO spokesman Felix Basse said U.N. troops were monitoring the situation in the area of the resource-rich east of the country controlled by the rebels during the current lull in fighting.

"At the moment, it is time to consolidate the positions recovered by the army pending further actions in the future," said Basse.

"The M23, which in practice controls the territory of Rutshuru (north of Goma)," has "imposed a curfew on civilians," said the Senegalese officer.

He said this was "completely unacceptable" and the situation was "being monitored by U.N. troops until future action".

The rebels, who seized Goma for 12 days in November before withdrawing to the surrounding hills under international pressure, retreated this week to around 30 kilometers (20 miles) north of the city in the face of a new U.N.-backed offensive by the army.

The M23 was launched by Tutsi soldiers who mutinied from the army in April 2012 and turned their guns on their former comrades.

The U.N. and the Kinshasa government accuse neighboring Rwanda of supporting the rebels, a charge Kigali denies.

The latest comments came as defense chiefs and foreign ministers from Africa's Great Lakes region met in Uganda in the latest bid to end the fighting in DR Congo.

Congolese troops, backed by a special United Nations force, launched a fresh assault against the M23 army mutineers in the turbulent North-Kivu province late last month

On Friday, the rebels retreated to Kibumba, some 30 kilometers north of Goma, the capital of the mineral-rich province of North Kivu.

Although there has been no fighting since Sunday, a high-ranking army officer told Agence France Presse on Monday that an offensive on Kibumba was planned "in the near future". He added that army positions were within two kilometers of the town.

Army spokesman Olivier Hamuli said the goal was to "consolidate" positions it had gained in the East, "knowing that Rwanda is behind" the M23.

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