M23 militia says it will withdraw from DR Congo city of Uvira after US pressure
The armed group's advance has raised fears of a wider conflict and has drawn US warnings that it might take action over a breached peace deal.
Le Monde with AFP
Published 17 December 2025
https://www.lemonde.fr/en/internati...ity-of-uvira-after-us-pressure_6748573_4.html
A patrol car of the M23 movement patrols in Uvira on December 13, 2025. JOSPIN MWISHA / AFP
The M23 armed group said Tuesday, December 16, it would withdraw from the key city of Uvira in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo at the request of Washington, which vowed "action" over the "clear violation" of a United States-brokered peace accord. The Rwanda-backed militia seized the strategic city near the border with Burundi last Wednesday, days after the Congolese and Rwandan governments signed the peace deal in Washington – an agreement US President Donald Trump had hailed as a "great miracle."
The M23's advance has thrown the future of the peace process into doubt and raised fears of a wider regional war. Its capture of Uvira – a city of several hundred thousand people – allowed it to control the land border with Burundi and cut the DRC off from military support from its neighbor. At least 85,000 refugees have fled into Burundi since the advance, with the numbers rising daily, Burundian officials said Tuesday.
"The vast majority of these refugees are women and children living in extreme precariousness," said Ezechiel Nibigira, the Burundian president of the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS) commission. They face "acute shortages of food, shelter, sanitation facilities, safe drinking water, basic health services," Nibigira said.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Saturday that Rwanda had clearly violated the peace agreement it signed with its neighbor on December 4, and vowed unspecified "action" in response. A day earlier, US ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz accused Rwanda of "leading the region toward more instability and toward war."
The leader of the M23's political branch, Corneille Nangaa, announced in a statement that the group would "unilaterally withdraw its forces from the city of Uvira, as requested by the US mediators." The group called for "adequate measures" to be put in place to manage the city, including "demilitarization, protecting its population and infrastructure, and monitoring the ceasefire with a neutral force." It gave no details on the implementation of the measures.
'Instill trust'
The group also called for implementation of a framework ceasefire deal that was reached in a parallel peace process negotiated in the Qatari capital Doha, which was agreed in November but never respected on the ground. The M23 said it was withdrawing as a gesture "to instill trust in order to give the Doha peace process every chance to succeed."
Burundi's foreign minister, Edouard Bizimana, said on X that the M23's announced withdrawal from Uvira was "a sheer lie to mislead the international opinion." "All seems to indicate that the Rwandan government is simply trying to ease international pressure," Bizimana wrote.
You can share an article by clicking on the share icons at the top right of it.
The total or partial reproduction of an article, without the prior written authorization of
Le Monde, is strictly forbidden.
For more information, see our
Terms and Conditions.
For all authorization requests, contact
[email protected].
https://www.lemonde.fr/en/internati...ity-of-uvira-after-us-pressure_6748573_4.html
Rwanda denies giving the M23 military support, but argues it faces an existential threat from the presence in eastern DRC of ethnic Hutu militants with links to the 1994 Rwandan genocide of Tutsis. The M23 has always denied links with Rwanda and says its aim is the overthrow of Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi's government. Yet UN experts say the Rwandan army has played a "critical" role in helping the M23.
The peace deal signed in Washington aimed to end three decades of conflict in the DRC's mineral-rich east. It includes an economic component intended to secure US supplies of critical minerals present in the region, as the US seeks to challenge China's dominance in the sector.
Besides gold and uranium, the DRC's mines contain significant deposits of copper, cobalt, coltan and lithium, with uses ranging from weaponry to mobile phones and electric cars. Despite the peace efforts, both sides have accused the other of violating the ceasefire.
The M23's takeover of Uvira was part of an offensive launched at the beginning of December in South Kivu province. The offensive on Uvira left dozens dead, at least 100 wounded and more than 200,000 displaced, according to NGOs and the UN. It followed the capture early this year of two other major eastern cities, Goma and Bukavu.