GOMA, DR Congo: Almost 170 soldiers, including seven senior officers, have quit the army in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo to join a mutinous armed force known as M23, the mutineers said Thursday.
The deserters were all members of a former rebel movement, the National Congress for the Defense of the People (CNDP), who were integrated into the army early in 2009, following a peace pact.
They “left the ranks of the FARDC (Congolese army) yesterday (Wednesday),” Lt. Col. Vianney Kazarama, spokesman for the March 23 Movement (M23), told AFP.
Three lieutenant-colonels and four majors deserted from the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of Congo (FARDC) with troops under their command — a total of 166 men — and brought their arms and ammunition with them, Kazarama said.
With the exception of a lieutenant-colonel who came from Sud-Kivu province, all the senior officers were based in Nord-Kivu province, where the army has been fighting M23 forces. One of the majors was responsible for logistics and two others were in army intelligence, the M23 spokesman said.
A senior officer in the FARDC confirmed to AFP that “certain officers are in the process of deserting,” without giving their numbers.
“I can’t be surprised because they are ex-CNDP men who are going to join their brothers. It’s not surprising that they are taking weapons because until their desertion they held command posts in the FARDC,” he added.
The deserters all “responded to the call by Col. (Sultani) Makenga,” the leader of M23 and a former leader of the CNDP who deserted early in May and demanded the full implementation of the peace accords of March 23, 2009, which covered the integration of CNDP rebels into the army, Kazarama said.
Troops who were once in the CNDP have been deserting for weeks, blaming their poor conditions in the army, and the FARDC has attacked them in the Virunga National Park, near the border with Rwanda and Uganda.
In spite of frequent shelling by the army, the mutineers have held their positions on the Runyony, Mbuzi and Chanzu hills in the park.
In recent days, a relative calm has prevailed in the conflict, which has displaced 200,000 local villagers and turned more than 20,000 into refugees on the far side of the border, according to the United Nations.
People are still leaving the combat zone, UN sources said.
“The residents who fled the fighting in Runyony have come back, and others elsewhere are fleeing the threat and the mistreatment on the part of the FARDC,” Kazarama said.
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