The group mentioned the choice was consistent with a ceasefire declared in February and in assist of peace initiatives.
M23 rebels staging an offensive within the japanese Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) will withdraw their forces from the city of Walikale, which they took control of this week, in assist of efforts to handle the battle, a insurgent alliance that features M23 has mentioned.
The Congo River Alliance mentioned in a press release on Saturday that it had “determined to reposition its forces” from Walikale and surrounding areas.
The Congolese authorities mentioned it hoped the transfer could be translated into concrete motion after M23 this week pulled out of planned talks with Congolese authorities in Angola on the final minute as a consequence of European Union sanctions on a few of its leaders and Rwandan officers.
It could have been its first direct engagement with DRC’s authorities after President Felix Tshisekedi reversed his longstanding refusal to talk to the rebels.
This determination was consistent with a ceasefire declared in February and in assist of peace initiatives, the alliance mentioned in a press release that was greeted with scepticism by DRC authorities military officers.
A senior member of the alliance who didn’t want to be named instructed the Reuters information company that repositioning meant withdrawing to “give peace an opportunity”. The supply declined to say the place M23 rebels would withdraw.
“We’re asking for Walikale and environment to stay demilitarised,” the supply mentioned. “If the FARDC (DRC’s military) and their allies come again, this implies they need to relaunch hostilities.”
Overseas Affairs Minister Therese Kayikwamba Wagner instructed reporters: “We’re going to see whether or not M23 will withdraw from Walikale and whether or not M23 will give precedence to dialogue and peace … So we hope that this shall be translated into concrete motion.”
Walikale is the furthest west the rebels have reached in an unprecedented advance that has already overrun japanese DRC’s two largest cities since January.
Its seize put the rebels inside 400km (250 miles) of Kisangani, the nation’s fourth-biggest metropolis with a bustling port on the Congo River’s farthest navigable level upstream of the capital Kinshasa, some 1,500km (930 miles) away.