Rubio presses President Kagame for immediate ceasefire in DR Congo
Africa
By
AFP
| Jan 29, 2025
Residents walk past the wreckage of a burned vehicle following clashes in the streets of Goma on January 28, 2025. [AFP]
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Tuesday pressed Rwanda for an immediate ceasefire in the Democratic Republic of Congo as he voiced alarm over Kigali-backed rebels entering the key city of Goma.
In a call with Rwandan President Paul Kagame, Rubio "stressed the United States is deeply troubled by escalation of the ongoing conflict in eastern DRC, particularly the fall of
The new top US diplomat "urged an immediate ceasefire in the region, and for all parties to respect sovereign territorial integrity," it said.
READ MORE
Safaricom, NGO launch AI product for small-scale farmers
Why KQ and Airtel are on watchdog's radar over consumer rights violations
Why fintechs have a duty to ensure positive social impact
Vivo defends Shell V-Power against poor quality claims
Truckers face mandatory use of planned Sh352b Mombasa-Nairobi Expressway
Suez Canal disruptions cost Kenyan fresh produce exporters
Chinese investor barred from visiting parents over Sh83.5 million tax arrears
Kenya eyes new IMF programme as current one nears end
International report warns against loss of control over AI
Fusion Estates taps ex-Mhasibu Housing CEO to drive its growth
"I look forward to working with the Trump Administration to create the prosperity and security that the people of our region deserve," Kagame said on social media platform X.
The United States for years has warned Rwanda about its support for the M23.
Under the previous administration of Joe Biden, the United States negotiated a fragile deal to de-escalate tensions.
The top diplomat for Africa under Biden, Molly Phee, told AFP before leaving office that the United States had proposed expanding a major infrastructure project to the troubled and mineral-rich east of the DRC, but accused Rwanda of walking away from diplomacy.
The M23 in recent days have advanced on Goma, entering the city and taking control of the airport.
Rwanda has denied charges it is seeking control of minerals, saying its aim is to tackle an armed group called the FDLR, primarily composed of Hutu militants formed in the wake of the Rwandan genocide.