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2008-01-22 Africa Subsaharan
Congo government, rebels to sign ceasefire Tuesday
Democratic Republic of Congo's government and warring rebel and militia factions will sign a deal on Tuesday to end fighting in the country's conflict-torn east, government officials and diplomats said on Monday.

The agreement, which will include a ceasefire, was announced after more than two weeks of talks in Goma, capital of North Kivu province, that brought together government officials, local leaders and rival armed factions.

"(A ceasefire) will be signed tomorrow at the closing ceremony," Vital Kamerhe, spokesman for the peace conference and head of Congo's lower house of parliament, told Reuters.

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More than 400,000 civilians in North Kivu have fled their homes over the past year to escape fighting between government soldiers, local Mai Mai militia, and Tutsi insurgents loyal to renegade General Laurent Nkunda.

Under the deal to be signed, an immediate permanent ceasefire would be established between the government, the Mai Mai and Nkunda, diplomats and observers at the talks said.

Nkunda's fighters would pull back from advanced positions in North Kivu, many of which they have held since the failure of a government offensive in December. This would create space for a buffer zone to be patrolled by United Nations peacekeepers.

A technical commission would then be established to oversee the disarmament of the Nkunda rebels and Mai Mai fighters and their integration into the national army, or demobilisation. The government would promise to create an amnesty law for the Mai Mai and the Nkunda rebels covering "insurgency and acts of war".

A similar agreement was also due to be signed for neighbouring South Kivu province involving another group of Tutsi insurgents and eight other Mai Mai militia factions.

The conflict in Congo's turbulent Kivus, which has its roots in neighbouring Rwanda's 1994 genocide, has raged on despite the official end of a broader 1998-2003 war and humanitarian catastrophe that killed an estimated 4 million people, mainly through hunger and disease.
Posted by Fred 2008-01-22 00:00|| || Front Page|| [11130 views ]  Top

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