(24 Feb 2017) The Democratic Republic of Congo's army said it has successfully pushed back a rebel advance in the Nord Kivu region, close to the country's border with Uganda.
An army spokesman said Thursday they had killed at least 16 former members of the M23 rebel group after they re-entered the country's east.
Fighting near Rutshuru began Wednesday and by Thursday the army had captured 68 former M23 rebels and 39 others surrendered, said Maj. Ndjike Kaiko.
The soldiers said they caught the rebels unprepared in the Songa valley area, rapidly routing them and putting them to flight.
M23 launched its rebellion in eastern Congo in April 2012, becoming the latest group of Tutsi rebels dissatisfied with Congo's government.
It was repulsed by United Nations forces and Congo's army in 2013.
Many rebels fled to Rwanda and Uganda before a 2013 peace agreement was signed with the government and the group disbanded.
But in January Congo's government warned that the former rebels in Uganda were re-grouping and crossing back into Congo.
Uganda's government said that hundreds of members of the rebel group in January fled a military camp there where they had been awaiting amnesty, and cautioned that many had been quietly infiltrating into the general public.
Congo residents said Thursday they are terrified of the group's return.
Eastern Congo has been plagued by many armed rebel groups since the Rwandan genocide in 1994.
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