Rebelgroup M23 takes Goma in eastern DRC

Jeremy F Kreuz

Dagobah Resident
In Africa the long lasting conflict around the great lakes has flared up again. M23, a Tusti based rebel group has taken the main town of Goma and it threatening to conquer more territory. Behind M23 is Rwanda and Uganda, and behind those two countries is the US. Timing seems particular, with all the eyes on the middle east, it seems that the US is launching a major battle in Africa. This conflict has cost the lives of millions of people in the last decade, and unfortunately many more are likely to follow.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/nov/20/congo-rebel-m23-take-goma

to get an idea about the reputation of the M23 rebels, you can read a report of Human Rights Watch about them on the following link

http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/09/11/dr-congo-m23-rebels-committing-war-crimes

in short they are suspected of
* mass rape
* recruitment of child soldiers
* ethnic massacres
* summary executions
* pillage
* abductions
* torture
* sexual slavery

but you could say that about many of the armed forces operating in Eastern Congo(including the FARDC (Congoles army).

The UN forces stood buy while the rebels took Goma (remember, remember Srebrenidza in the former Yougoslavia).
 
Jeremy F Kreuz said:
...Timing seems particular, with all the eyes on the middle east, it seems that the US is launching a major battle in Africa...

Any more, I have my doubts that "the US" does much of anything. Everything seems to be "covert action." This is quite a situation we find ourselves in.
 
some analysis on hwat has happened since the take over of Goma by M23 and some prognosis of what might happen.


Humanitarian crisis looming in Congo as thousand flee fighting: About half a million people have been displaced since April by a violent rebellion by militia group M23. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/nov/22/humanitarian-crisis-congo

The political implications of the M23 offensive in eastern DRC

source: www.exclusive-analysis.com

KEY JUDGMENT

President Kabila is likely to seek a negotiated settlement with M23 rebels that will increase the probability of his political survival. However, if such negotiations take longer than two weeks or if they fail completely and M23 expands the territory under its control, the risk of political instability will be severe. In such a scenario, Kabila is likely to be ousted if there are mass demonstrations in cities at the same time as an outbreak of mutinies at military barracks as a result of intensifying public and military frustration with his leadership.

DETAILED ANALYSIS

Over the next week, M23 will look to consolidate its control over mineral-rich areas in North Kivu before moving towards Bukavu. An on-going Army counter-offensive is likely to slow M23's momentum, although likely further reinforcements of Rwandan troops would give M23 a strategic advantage.

Following our update on 21 November, the M23 rebel group has consolidated its control over key locations in Goma, the capital of North Kivu Province, and has subsequently mobilised to capture Sake, 25 km west of Goma. On 22 November the Congolese Army (FARDC) launched a counter-offensive near Sake from Minova. Both sides currently claim to hold Sake, although our local sources confirm that M23 has now gained the upper hand and moved south to another area (Macha/Shasha). According to social media, Rwandan Defence Forces (RDF) have been spotted supporting the M23 at Sake, confirming that Rwanda is still supporting the group despite calls for a ceasefire in a joint communique. While the M23's advance has been slowed at Sake, likely further reinforcements by RDF troops would give it a strategic advantage over the FARDC.

While M23 has claimed it aims to capture Bukavu, the capital of South Kivu province, we assess that the group is more likely to first move west from Sake towards Masisi, where it has usually enjoyed considerable support and would be able to cooperate with local Mai-Mai militias. A key indicator for an M23 deployment towards Bukavu would be further attempted counter-offensives by the FARDC from the south, which would force the M23 south to meet them. Additionally, an outbreak of violence by the M23-allied MCC rebel group in Uvira (south of Bukavu) would be another indicator that M23 intends to deploy south and join up with the MCC in a coordinated assault on Bukavu. Any mobilisation towards Bukavu is very likely to be met with strong resistance by both the FARDC and other armed groups, especially the ethnic Hutu FDLR and other Mai-Mai militias that are opposed to M23, particularly around Kalehe and Kabare territories (as well as Shabunda territory, which does not lie on the Goma-Bukavu route).

Despite M23 claims to the contrary, it is very unlikely that they would attempt to march towards the capital Kinshasa given the logistical challenges and distances involved. Instead, if an assault on Bukavu is unsuccessful, M23 is likely to take the time to consolidate its control over the Rutshuru-Goma-Masisi triangle, a traditional stronghold of the CNDP (from which the M23 was largely formed). A successful FARDC counter-offensive would only be likely with support from rival armed groups or the United Nations MONUSCO mission (currently unlikely as its mandate has not yet been strengthened) or alternatively if Rwanda suspends military support to M23 (also unlikely). We assess that as long as M23 receives RDF support it will retain a strategic advantage over the FARDC and its allied proxy groups.

In the currently unlikely event of a defeat of M23 by the FARDC, the rebels would be likely to retreat north towards its stronghold in Rutshuru, and possibly the Virunga Mountains. Attempts to dislodge them from this position would raise the risk of collateral damage to mining operations by RandGold and AngloGold Ashanti, as well as energy operations by SOCO, Total, and SacOil. Whilst we do not expect the M23 to deploy far enough south to directly affect mining assets such as Banro's Twangiza mine, disruption to operations in the area will become more likely as competing armed groups seek to increase rent from mines to boost their position. Mining operations in Katanga are very unlikely to face risk of disruption due to the relative stability of the province.

In the most likely case of a negotiated settlement, President Kabila is likely to be forced to offer increased autonomy to the provinces to appease his critics, raising risks to mining and energy contracts.

We assess that M23's intentions are to seek direct negotiations with Kinshasa rather than to oust President Kabila. M23's alleged backers in Rwanda are also unlikely to seek regime change in DRC, which would exacerbate current regional instability. The threat of targeted and economic sanctions against Rwanda following the release of the UN Experts Report, which alleged Rwandan support for M23, is also likely to disrupt Rwandan financial and other support to M23 over the coming weeks. This will increase pressure on the group to seek a negotiated settlement with the Kinshasa government within weeks. In this case, the threat to President Kabila would be mitigated, although an agreement would be highly unpopular with the military and Kinshasa-allied Mai-Mai militias. Moreover, if Kabila is forced into offering increased autonomy, i.e. over levying taxes and controlling security forces, to North Kivu, this would trigger similar demands in other provinces. Increased autonomy for provinces would increase the risk of contract reviews and demands for double taxation to foreign investors, particularly those in the mining and energy sectors.

If the FARDC does not retake Goma within two weeks or if M23 continues to expand its territory, the risk to President Kabila's government will become severe. Mass demonstrations in major cities and mutinies at military barracks would be key indicators for the ousting of President Kabila.

We are monitoring a number of indicators that would have to occur simultaneously for the risk of political instability to rise to severe over the next few weeks, including the ones below,

Civil Unrest in major cities: Since the capture of Goma by M23 on 20 November, violent protests have erupted in cities throughout DRC, including Kinshasa, Kisangani, Bunia and Bukavu. UN and ruling party interests have been targeted during demonstrations and security forces have used live ammunition to disperse protesters. So far, opposition parties have failed to coordinate the protests, or even provide a united condemnation of President Kabila. We also assess that distrust of M23 and its alleged backer, Rwanda, is likely to mitigate the risk of an outbreak of nationwide unrest. However, continued failure by President Kabila to end M23's advance would exacerbate on-going protests and allow the opposition to join and coordinate the protest movement.

If we see this, the probability of widespread unrest would heighten the risk of Kabila's removal from power through protests. Violent protests and riots in Kinshasa would pose the greatest risk to Kabila's government. It is unlikely that key regional allies like Angola would agree to deploy sufficient troops to Kinshasa to protect Kabila, as they have done in the past, due to lingering territorial disputes between the two countries. However, we assess that a popular uprising is very unlikely to be successful without dissent in the security forces.

Unrest within the military: The loss of Goma to M23, President Kabila's perceived weakness and his unpopular decision to begin negotiations with M23 have increased the risk of a military coup. Our sources report that the military is strongly divided and that various factions see President Kabila's removal as necessary for the restoration of stability in the East. The removal of Army Chief Amisi and planned further reshuffles in the military high command will incite anger among senior officers (although some sources report that Asisi's removal has appeased other factions). A source in Goma reported that the on-going FARDC and Mai-Mai counter-offensive around Sake and Minova had not received approval from Kabila and was instead led by Amisi and other officers frustrated with his leadership.

While Kabila will be able to benefit from factionalism within the military by playing off rival commanders against each other, a negotiated settlement with M23 or failure to retake Goma within a few weeks will critically raise the probability of a military coup against Kabila. An outbreak of mutinies at key barracks, most likely starting in the East and spreading westwards from there to Kinshasa, would be the most likely pathway towards Kabila's removal by the military. We also assess that a military coup would be most likely in case of widespread and heavily attended demonstrations, particularly in Kinshasa.

Demands for regional autonomy: Kabila's inability to provide strong leadership following the loss of Goma to M23 is likely to encourage provincial governors (despite their affiliation to Kabila's PPRD party) and local power brokers to demand more autonomy for provinces. Such demands are most likely to come from western provinces, as eastern provinces would be more likely to side with Kabila in the face of a perceived Rwandan aggression. While such demands alone would be unlikely to pose a threat to Kabila, they would be an indication of the growing frustration and embolden both the local civilian population and the military to protest or mutiny.

Progress of M23 offensive: Despite the FARDC and Mai-Mai counter-offensive, M23 is likely to halt its offensive only if the Kinshasa government formally agrees to commence direct negotiations or if the on-going joint counter-offensive proves successful (which is increasingly unlikely given M23's advance from Sake towards Macha/Shasha). However, any stalling by Kinshasa or subsequent failure of the talks would further raise the threat to President Kabila's government. If Goma is still under M23 control in two weeks and there has been little progress on negotiations, the other three indicators are more likely to be activated. In case the counter-offensive fails and especially if M23 captures Bukavu, the risk to Kabila would become severe.
 
for those who might have missed it, great article on SOTT on the situation in DRC

http://www.sott.net/article/254067-Tens-of-thousands-of-traumatised-civilians-flee-Goma-in-contrived-US-created-Congo-war
 
two articles of reuters to update on the development

* talks are started on conditions for the rebels to withdraw from the town of Goma
* these talks are seemingly not going to go very far

Congo rebels dig in as leader heads for talks
By Richard Lough and Jonny Hogg | Reuters – Mon, Nov 26, 2012
GOMA, Democratic Republic of Congo (Reuters) - Rebels in Democratic Republic of Congo consolidated their positions in the hills around the seized city of Goma on Monday, as their leader flew to Uganda for talks aimed at convincing them to withdraw.
African leaders are scrambling to contain the latest violence in eastern Congo, where nearly two decades of conflict has been fuelled by political and ethnic rifts and competition over vast minerals resources.
Rebel M23 fighters captured Goma last week, eight months into an insurgency U.N. experts say is backed by Rwanda, after Congolese soldiers withdrew and the world's largest and most expensive U.N. peacekeeping force gave up defending the city.
The fighting raised fears for the safety of civilians and of a worsening refugee crisis, as well as triggering protests targeting the government and the United Nations by people furious at them for failing to stop the rebels' advance.
Congolese President Joseph Kabila met M23 rebels for the first time at the weekend after a summit in Uganda where regional leaders gave M23 two days to leave Goma, but gave no specific consequences. The U.N. experts also accuse Uganda of backing the rebels, an allegation Uganda denies.
Rebel leader Colonel Sultani Makenga was on his way to Uganda's capital Kampala at the invitation of the head of the Ugandan military, M23 spokesman Amani Kabasha told Reuters by telephone from Goma.
The Ugandan military said it could not immediately confirm Makenga's visit but that it was probable because Uganda's chief of defence forces, Aronda Nyakayirima, was meant to enforce the call by regional leaders for M23's withdrawal from Goma.
VOLCANO
"To kick them out by force would be difficult. Many people would die. But I fear that in the event negotiations fail a full-blown war will resume," said Goma resident Thierry Malick, a 29-year-old flight security officer with Kivu Air.
M23 fighters on Monday showed no signs of pulling back, instead fanning out into the hills south of rebel-held Sake, about 25 km (15 miles) from Goma, and less then 20 km north of government positions.
Within the lakeside city at the foot of a volcano, more than a dozen M23 fighters armed with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic rifles guarded the central bank building, while others were dotted around the city.
U.N. experts say Rwanda, a small but militarily powerful neighbour that has intervened in Congo repeatedly over the past 18 years, is giving orders to the rebels and supplying arms and recruits. Rwanda and M23 have denied the accusations.
Rebel leaders share ethnic ties with the Tutsi leadership of Rwanda, which says Hutu perpetrators of Rwanda's genocide have taken shelter in eastern Congo, which has big reserves of gold, tin and coltan - an ore of rare metals used in making mobile phones and computers.
The last big war in Congo from 1998 to 2003, drew in six countries, and regional leaders want to nip in the bud any further destablising conflict in the country the size of western Europe, especially now the region is attracting significant foreign investment in its raw materials.
"WITHDRAWAL UNLIKELY"
Another rebel spokesman in Goma, Vianney Kazarama, confirmed M23 fighters were taking up positions around Sake, and said a withdrawal from Goma was unlikely.
"We're not refusing to leave it, if the security of the population can be guaranteed," he said, standing outside the city's central bank building. "But who is going to protect 1 million people. MONUSCO? The armed groups in the town hiding? We are the protector of the people."
MONUSCO is the name of the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Congo. France described its decision to stop defending Goma, the provincial capital of North Kivu, as "absurd".
In a sign local administrators were heeding the rebels' call to return to work in Goma, customs officers at the city's border with Rwanda worked on clearing a backlog of trucks while policemen stood at crossroads directing the modest traffic flow.
The road into government-held Minova, just south of Sake, is being guarded by several army roadblocks, while in the centre of town hundreds of soldiers were milling around in the markets or lounging in the streets.
"I can't believe what happened to us in Goma ... But we have to carry on fighting," one soldier, with a large bandage over a wound on his head, told Reuters.
The M23 group is named after a March 23, 2009 peace deal that integrated Tutsi rebels into the army, but which they say the government violated.
Late last week the rebels sent reinforcements into Sake to push back a government counter-offensive there.
Congo has said it will not negotiate with the rebels until they pull out of Goma, but the rebels said the government was in no position to set conditions on peace talks.
A diplomat said the African Union was due to hold a Peace and Security Council meeting later on Monday to discuss the crisis which has displaced thousands people.

Congo rebels set conditions for Goma withdrawal
By Richard Lough and Jonny Hogg | Reuters – 21 hrs ago
GOMA, Democratic Republic of Congo (Reuters) - Rebels in Democratic Republic of Congo said on Tuesday they would withdraw from the eastern city of Goma only if President Joseph Kabila agreed to their demands, which the Congolese government was quick to dismiss as a farce.
The deadlock raises the risk that the eight-month-old insurgency could turn into an all-out war in a region dogged by nearly two decades of conflict that has killed more than 5 million people, fuelled by competition over mineral resources.
The M23 rebels, who U.N. experts say are backed by Rwanda and who say they want to "liberate" all of Congo, captured Goma last week after Congolese soldiers withdrew and U.N. peacekeepers gave up defending the city.
The Ugandan military, which has been coordinating talks with M23, said earlier on Tuesday that M23 leader Colonel Sultani Makenga had agreed to withdraw from Goma with no conditions.
But the political chief of M23, Jean-Marie Runiga, told reporters in Goma his forces would withdraw only if Kabila held national talks, released political prisoners and dissolved the electoral commission, a body accused by Western powers of delivering Kabila a second term in flawed 2011 polls.
"The withdrawal, yes. If Kabila agrees to our demands then we'll go quickly," Runiga told reporters in a hotel in Goma, flanked by senior M23 officials in civilian clothes and rebels in military fatigues.
Runiga said Kabila's government was rotten with corruption, lamented the country's dilapidated roads, and said Congo's only schools and hospitals had been left by Belgian former colonial rulers. He said any talks would have to tackle such issues.
"We want the involvement of the political opposition, civil society and the diaspora so we can tackle these issues together, so that the people hear the truth and that once and for all we find a solution to the problems that have poisoned our society and politics," he said.
"We are fighting to find solutions to Congo's problems. Withdrawal from Goma is not a precondition to negotiations but a result of them," he said.
The conflicting statements indicated a solution to the insurgency in eastern Congo, which has displaced 140,000 civilians according to the United Nations, was not close.
Lambert Mende, Congo's government spokesman, quickly dismissed M23's demands.
"It's a farce, that's the word. There's been a document adopted by the region. If each day they're going to come back with new demands it becomes ridiculous. We're no longer in the realm of seriousness," Mende told Reuters from Kinshasa.
Later in the day, Ugandan military chief Aronda Nyakayirima read out the withdrawal plan to reporters, but made no mention of M23's apparent rejection of the plan.
He said the plan specified M23 would begin its withdrawal on Tuesday, and government troops would enter Goma two days later, followed by a visit by regional defence chiefs "to evaluate the situation and find out whether all these timelines were met".
NO SIGN OF PULL-OUT
The rebels on Tuesday showed no signs of an imminent pull-out and continued to guard strategic sites in Goma.
More than half a dozen armed M23 fighters dressed in crisp fatigues stood in front of the central bank building as U.N. peacekeepers in two troop carriers looked on.
"This is a sign we are in this for the long haul. M23 is digging in while the Congolese army prepares another offensive," said Jason Stearns of independent research organisation the Rift Valley Institute. "It is difficult to imagine what the possible compromise could be between the two sides," Stearns said.
African leaders had at the weekend called on M23 to abandon their aim of toppling the government and to withdraw from Goma. The Great Lakes heads of state also proposed that U.N. peacekeepers in and around the city should provide security in a neutral zone between Goma and new areas seized by M23.
Runiga also demanded the lifting of house arrest on a leading Kinshasa-based opposition member Etienne Tshisekedi as well as an inquiry into army corruption.
He said the rebels were ready to work with MONUSCO, the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Congo.
In a potential further escalation, Rwanda said on Tuesday its troops clashed with Rwandan FDLR rebels who attacked three villages on its border with Congo, but a spokesman for the FDLR denied its fighters had been involved.
Rwanda has in the past used the presence of the FDLR as a justification for intervening in neighbour Congo. But the rebel group, which experts say has dwindled in strength, has not mounted a significant attack on Rwanda in years.
Congo and U.N. experts accuse Rwanda of backing the M23 group in eastern Congo, which has big reserves of gold, tin and coltan, an ore of rare metals used in making mobile phones.
That is denied by Rwandan President Paul Kagame who has long complained that Kabila's government and U.N. peacekeepers have not done enough to drive out the FDLR from eastern Congo.
 
http://www.coons.senate.gov/newsroom/releases/release/senate-votes-to-sanction-those-helping-m23-in-eastern-congo

Senate votes to sanction those helping M23 in Eastern Congo
Amendment imposing an asset freeze and visa ban on those supporting the M23 added to Defense Authorization bill

WASHINGTON – The United States Senate unanimously passed an amendment Thursday night imposing sanctions on those providing financial, material, or technological support to the M23 rebel group in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Amendment 3199 to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) was introduced by Senators Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Chris Coons (D-Del.), Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), John Boozman (R-Ark.), Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), and Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.).

“M23 has demonstrated an unconscionable disregard for human life and Congo's territorial integrity and seems determined to sink central Africa in another deadly, devastating war that could set the region back a generation,” Senator Coons said. “The actions of M23 rebels, as well as those who aid and abet the M23, are deplorable and must be stopped immediately. These sanctions are designed to stop the illicit and dangerous support the M23 is receiving from those seeking to destabilize the region. I applaud Senator Durbin for taking the lead on this amendment, and am pleased the Senate spoke with one voice in unanimously supporting its passage.” Senator Coons is chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on African Affairs.

“The civil war in eastern Congo is the most lethal conflict since the Second World War and its barbarism defies description,” Senator Durbin said. “Last week, a well-armed rebel forces occupied the city of Goma and have set their sights on Kinshasa, Congo’s capital. The rebels, known for brutal violence and led by known war criminals, have the potential to destabilize the entire nation. As the violence continues to escalate, it is clear that the rebels are benefitting from strategic and material support from outside forces. This amendment freezes the assets and implements a visa ban for any person providing such troubling support. Our goal is to hasten an end to the violence by starving the rebels of their key lines of support.” Senator Durbin is a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on African Affairs.

Eastern Congo has been plagued by civil war for over the better part of two decades. Fighting for control of the region’s vast mineral resources, the fighting has killed millions and subjected innocent civilians to unspeakable levels of violence, include rape as a weapon of war. Known as the “Rape Capital of the World,” an estimated 1,000 women assaulted every day – nearly 12 percent of all women in Congo. The conflict is also marred by the use of child soldiers and the bloody and brutal violence inflicted on civilian populations.

M23 is a rebel group comprised largely of defectors from the Congolese army. The group seized the eastern city of Goma in the Democratic Republic of Congo last week and, despite reports of a planned withdrawal yesterday, still occupies the important trading city. According to a report by the U.N. Group of Experts, the group is reported to be receiving significant assistance from neighboring Rwanda.

Last week, the U.N. Security Council passed a resolution calling on M23 to disarm, disband, and return control of Goma to the Congolese government, and urging nations to impose sanctions on M23 and its supporters. On Monday, the African Union said it was considering deploying an international force from Tanzania to oversee the withdrawal of M23.

The Democratic Republic of Congo was founded in 2003 at the conclusion of Second Congo War — a five-year multi-lateral conflict involving eight nations and two-dozen militia groups. The war and lingering conflicts are reported to have claimed the lives of 5.4 million people. It was the deadliest war in modern African history.
 
Thanks for posting about the ongoing horror in the DRC which are basically unnoticed by most in spite of 9 million deaths and mass rape. Two great books to understand the situation in the DRC are:
Michela Wrong's, In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz.
http://www.amazon.com/Footsteps-Mr-Kurtz-Disaster-Mobutus/dp/0060934433

and King Leopold's Ghost
http://www.amazon.com/King-Leopolds-Ghost-Heroism-Colonial/dp/0618001905
 
M23 has done what seems a tactical retreat from Goma. In the wake of the retreat a refugee camp is attacked (unknown now by whom) with pillage and rape as usual.

http://www.timeslive.co.za/africa/2012/12/02/gunmen-attack-drc-camp-as-forces-take-over-goma

Authorities in Democratic Republic of Congo's eastern city of Goma assumed gradual control of the mining hub on Sunday after a rebel pullout, but tensions were running high with gunmen attacking a nearby camp for displaced people.
UN refugee agency officials reported cases of looting and rape in the attack late Saturday on the giant Mugunga camp, which lies about 10 kilometres (six miles) west of Goma and is home to up to 35,000 displaced people.
The attack came hours after the withdrawal of M23 rebel fighters in line with a regionally brokered deal to end their occupation of Goma which had stoked fears about stability in the war-blighted area that borders Rwanda and Uganda.
"It's a step in the right direction," government spokesman Lambert Mende told AFP of the withdrawal, adding that President Joseph Kabila would soon start "listening to the grievances" of the mainly Tutsi rebels as part of peace negotiations.
Security in the volatile region remains fluid following the M23's 12-day occupation of Goma, despite over 160 police reinforcements arriving by boat at the lake port to beef up some 300 colleagues who arrived Saturday.
Alongside United Nations peacekeepers, a few police patrols were seen on the streets of Goma, a city of around one million people that is the hub of the resource-rich area. Some 600 government soldiers are also reported to be on their way to Goma.
The UN-backed Radio Okapi has also been jammed since late Saturday, officials said, after it aired an interview with M23 political leader Jean-Marie Runiga.
While the rebels' lightning seizure of Goma last week -- eight months after they launched their uprising -- sparked fear of a wider war and major humanitarian crisis, their pullout raised hopes it signalled a move back from further conflict.
The region has already been the cradle of back-to-back wars that embroiled other nations from 1996 to 2003 fought largely over its vast wealth of copper, diamonds, gold and key mobile phone component coltan.
Residents were wary of the arrival of government soldiers, who, like the rebels, have been accused of abuses including killings of civilians, rape and looting during the latest unrest.
"They used to intimidate you and ask you for money," said Angeline, a Goma resident who only gave her first name.
"Of course we're a little worried... what we want is peace," she added, sitting at her small market stall, empty of goods.
Singing songs and waving guns, M23 fighters crammed on to a convoy of looted trucks left Goma on Saturday, taking heavy weaponry and ammunition seized when Congo's army fled in disarray from their advance.
But the rebels remain just outside Goma, having pledged to withdraw only 20 kilometres (12 miles) under a regionally brokered deal, with complex negotiations now to focus on their demands, which include political reform.
-- 'The war is far from over' --
Jason Stearns, an independent analyst, warned the withdrawal "is just a tactical retreat and the war is far from over."
Kris Berwouts, another independent analyst, added that while "there may be new negotiations, it is not going to solve anything long term," noting the rebellion was sparked by the failure of earlier peace deals.
UN peacekeepers, who were unable to stop the rebel sweep across the east, said they had no plans to boost its current force of 1,600 troops in Goma, said spokesman Madnodje Mounoubai.
Under the deal agreed by the rebels, the M23 will post 100 men at Goma airport alongside similar numbers of government troops, soldiers from neighbouring Tanzania and UN peacekeepers.
M23 was founded by former fighters in a Tutsi rebel group whose members were integrated into the regular army under a 2009 peace deal that they claim was never fully implemented. Several of its leaders have been hit by UN sanctions over alleged atrocities.
Decades of conflict between multiple militia forces -- as well as meddling by regional armies -- have ravaged Congo's east.
UN experts have accused Rwanda and Uganda -- which played active roles in DR Congo's 1996-2003 wars -- of supporting M23, a charge both countries deny.
Britain on Friday froze $33.7 million (25.9 million euros) in aid to Rwanda following what it said was "credible and compelling reports of Rwandan involvement with M23".
Aid agencies are struggling to cope with the newly displaced, with some 285,000 people having fled their homes since the rebels began their uprising in April.
A UN report said Wednesday their work had been hampered by the closure of Goma airport.
The instability in DR Congo's east was exacerbated by the aftermath of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, when Hutus implicated in the killing of some 800,000 mostly Tutsi victims fled across the Congolese border after Tutsi leader Paul Kagame came to power.
 
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