blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
World News

 

Rwanda, DR Congo presidents agree to emergency summit
Posted: 01 November 2008 0551 hrs

  Joseph Kabila
 
Photos  of

   
 


KINSHASA - Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila and Rwandan President Paul Kagame have agreed to attend an emergency summit on the crisis in Congo, the EU development and humanitarian aid commissioner Louis Michel said Friday.

"I had asked (UN Secretary General) Ban Ki-moon to organise a meeting at the highest level," Michel said. "President Kabila has signalled his accord and so has President Kagame."

Michel said both leaders were clearly sincere about "opting for dialogue and putting an end to the reasons that are undermining the east" of the country -- the scene of protracted fighting between rebels and government forces.

The meeting will be held in the Kenyan capital Nairobi under the aegis of the United Nations and the African Union, he said, with the objective to "find a road map with mechanisms of verification".

Kagame and Kabila had shunned a similar summit in November last year, also in Nairobi.

The EU commissioner reiterated his backing for European troops to be despatched to the Congo's volatile mineral-rich east to ensure humanitarian supplies.

Michel, a former Belgian foreign minister with a long-standing interest in central Africa, was in Kinshasa on Friday at the end of a regional tour that also took him to Goma and the Rwandan capital Kigali.

His mission focused on the conflict as well as on the humanitarian crisis faced by those displaced by the fighting in the east of Congo.

Rebels of the National Congress for the Defence of the People (CNDP), led by Laurent Nkunda, declared a unilateral truce Wednesday as they surrounded the strategic city of Goma after routing government forces in Nord-Kivu province.

Fighting resumed in the east of Congo on August 28 in violation of a ceasefire agreed in January, marking a return to unrest that has gripped the region since the mid-1990s.

Some 220,000 people have been displaced since August, bringing to more than one million the number forced from their homes in Nord-Kivu, a province bordering Rwanda that totals five million.

- AFP /ls

 


Other world News
Twin car bombs rock Syria's Aleppo, kill 25
Europe's Danube freezes over, cold snap toll at 460
Obama hails Italian PM in talks on euro crisis
Argentina to lodge Falklands protest at UN Friday
Palestinian leadership backs Fatah-Hamas Doha deal
British Islamists jailed for plotting terror attacks
Britain to defend Falklands right to self-determination: PM
US approves first nuclear plant in decades
US says it has not seen Egypt charges against NGO staff
Algeria's president sets May parliament polls
Steve Jobs' unflattering FBI files released
Cautious welcome for UN-Arab League mission in Syria
Obama to meet Italian PM on euro crisis
Blasts rock Syria's Aleppo, tanks enter Homs
Syria unrest death toll rises
Syria's Homs under new deadly blitz

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions