Mass graves found in eastern Congo after rebel withdrawal, governor says


South Kivu Governor Jean-Jacques Purusi Sadiki speaks during a Reuters interview in Bukavu, South Kivu province, Democratic Republic of the Congo February 12, 2025. REUTERS/Edwin Waita

Feb 27 (Reuters) - Two mass graves ⁠containing a total of at least 172 bodies have been found in the Democratic ⁠Republic of Congo's eastern city of Uvira, following the withdrawal of the ‌AFC/M23 rebel group, a senior government official said.

The rebels briefly captured Uvira, a transit hub on Lake Tanganyika, near the Burundian border, in December. They began withdrawing a week later under U.S. pressure and the Congolese army ​re-entered the city last month.

AFC/M23 spokesperson Lawrence Kanyuka told ⁠Reuters he had been unaware of ⁠any mass graves during the group’s time in Uvira and accused the government of spreading ⁠propaganda ‌to damage its reputation.

Reuters was not able to independently verify the circumstances of the deaths.

Jean-Jacques Purusi, the Kinshasa-appointed governor of South Kivu province, where Uvira is located, ⁠told local reporters the graves had been found in the ​Kilomoni and Kavimvira neighbourhoods. One ‌contained 31 bodies, the other 141, he added in comments made on Tuesday ⁠that were recorded ​and broadcast in the country on Thursday.

A local human rights activist, Mashauri Mwindule, told Reuters more graves had been found in Kabimba, a village 8 km (5 miles) from Uvira.

Campaign group Human Rights Watch ⁠reported in December that M23 fighters had carried out ​summary executions in Uvira, with bodies found in several neighbourhoods, including Kavimvira.

HRW cited residents and a United Nations source. AFC/M23 did not respond to those allegations at the time but had ⁠previously accused the organisation of running a "disinformation campaign" against it.

The Congolese army and allied militia groups also committed abuses before the rebels took the city and as they retreated, Human Rights Watch said.

AFC/M23 controls swathes of North and South Kivu provinces after a rapid offensive last ​year in which it seized the strategic cities of Goma ⁠and Bukavu.

Rwanda rejects allegations from Congo, the United Nations and Western powers that it supports ​M23 with arms and troops.

Fighting has continued in recent weeks ‌on several fronts in eastern Congo despite mediation ​efforts by several actors, including Qatar and the United States.

(Reporting by Congo newsroom; Writing by Clement Bonnerot; Editing by Robbie Corey-Boulet, Andrew Heavens and Hugh Lawson)

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