DR Congo crisis: Former presidential candidate Rex Kazadi joins AFC/M23 – reports

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DR Congo crisis: Former presidential candidate Rex Kazadi joins AFC/M23 – reports
DR Congo crisis: Former presidential candidate Rex Kazadi joins AFC/M23 – reports

Africa-Press – Rwanda. Rex Kazadi, a candidate for DR Congo’s December 2023 presidential elections, has joined the Alliance Fleuve Congo (AFC/M23) rebellion’s ranks, according to reports indicating that he registered on Sunday, March 30, from Europe. On Sunday, AFC/M23 coordinator Corneille Nangaa appealed to the entire DR Congo diaspora to join the cause for liberating the country.

“It is with joy that I sign my membership in the Alliance Fleuve Congo today,” Kazadi is heard declaring during a press conference, in a short video posted on his on social media platforms.

“Thank you sincerely for including me in your movement. It’s an honour to join your team. I am ready to invest fully to our common values.”

In 2023, during the launch of his electoral campaign in Kinshasa, Kazadi had, among other things, promised to help restore peace in the east of the country once elected.

On Friday, the Alliance Fleuve Congo allowed the South African-led Southern African Development Community (SADC) troops to leave eastern DR Congo with their weapons and equipment. The southern African forces who surrendered after the rebels captured Goma, the capital of DR Congo’s North Kivu Province, in January, were part of the Congolese army coalition.

In the past few months, Alliance Fleuve Congo has seen its numbers grow with the joining of several other Congolese armed groups and opposition politicians. In February, Twirwaneho, an armed self-defence group fighting to protect the Banyamulenge community in South Kivu Province announced that it had joined ranks with AFC/M23 to fight the Congolese government. This came shortly after the death of Twirwaneho’s leader, Col Michel Rukunda, who was reportedly killed in a drone attack carried out by Congolese forces.

Led by Nangaa, the former chairman of the Congolese national electoral commission, Alliance Fleuve Congo is fighting for governance that supports basic human rights, secures all Congolese citizens, and addresses the root causes of conflict. The rebellion has vowed to uproot tribalism, nepotism, corruption, and the genocide ideology spread by the DR Congo-backed Rwandan genocidal militia, FDLR, among other vices, widespread in DR Congo. FDLR is a DR Congo-backed terrorist militia founded in mid-2000 by remnants of the masterminds of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda that poses an existential threat to the Congolese Tutsi community.

Fully integrated into the Congolese army coalition, the genocidal militia joined forces with Kinshasa’s allies with a plan to attack Rwanda. The militia’s genocidal ideology is the biggest threat to Rwanda, and the entire region.

In a video message posted on X on Sunday, March 30, Nangaa told the Congolese diaspora that “our revolution will not be selective” and it “will not be a group of friends, nor a group of opportunists.”

He added: “On the contrary, we open our doors without any distinction, to the best of you according to your field of expertise. This is to allow our country to meet all the challenges of the new era – a respected state, a reconciled people, and a dignified nation. Our revolution continues its inexorable march for more justice, more freedom, and prosperity in the unity of all Congolese.

“Mobilize yourself more to accompany the Congolese revolutionary army for the triumph of our values. Long live the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Long live the Alliance Fleuve Congo. Long live the Congolese diaspora. May God bless you and protect you.”

Message du Coordonnateur de l’Alliance Fleuve Congo (AFC/M23), Corneille Nangaa, à la diaspora congolaise pic.twitter.com/kLd0NUqXIR

— Lawrence KANYUKA (@LawrenceKanyuka) March 30, 2025

Since January, the Congolese armed forces have suffered major losses in the war against AFC/M23 rebels. The Congolese army coalition comprised hundreds of European mercenaries, FDLR, Congolese ethnic militias called Wazalendo, Burundian armed forces, South African-led SADC forces, as well as UN peacekeepers.

Following the heavy fighting triggered by constant violations of an earlier set ceasefire by the Congolese armed forces (FARDC) in coalition, on January 27, the rebels captured Goma, and quickly moved to secure and stabilise the situation and restore order there.

Hundreds of Congolese soldiers surrendered and later joined the rebels.

As the security situation in South Kivu deteriorated amid reports of violence, looting, and abuses propagated by the Congolese army coalition, the rebels again reacted, first capturing the strategic airport of Kavumu, before moving south to capture the regional capital, Bukavu, on February 15.

On March 19, they seized the town of Walikale which sits about 130 kilometers northwest Goma. It was the farthest west the rebels had reached during their rapid advance this year.

Walikale has, for many year, been a stronghold of FDLR.

Fighting between the Congolese army coalition and M23 rebels resumed in 2021.

The M23 was created on May 6, 2012, due to numerous failures of the Congolese government, including Kinshasa’s refusal to implement a peace agreement signed on March 23, 2009.

In January 2009, a former politico-military group formed about three years earlier, the Congrès national pour la défense du people (CNDP), had stopped rebellion after Kinshasa promised to, among others, integrate its fighters into the national army.

Top government officials including the then defense minister Charles Mwando Simba – who passed away, in Belgium, in December 2016 – attended a ceremony held at Rumangabo military camp, about 45 kilometres north of Goma, the capital of North Kivu Province, to welcome the first group of rebel fighters into the national army. A few days later, CNDP officials announced the “the de facto transformation of CNDP into a political party” recognized by the government –after their fighter’s integration into the national army.

But about 11 months after denouncing rebellion and becoming a political party, everything was back to ground zero. At the time, a frustrated head of the ex- rebel group-turned political party, Désiré Kamanzi, resigned.

“The fundamental reasons are, notably, the slowness in implementation of the agreements we have signed with the government since January,” Kamanzi announced, explaining that “we requested that there be holding of a regular national monitoring committee, but this was in vain.”

Today, M23 is part of a larger and growing rebel coalition, Alliance Fleuve Congo, created in December 2023.

A vast Congolese army coalition backed by Western countries including Belgium and comprising the Rwandan genocidal militia and Burundian forces worsened the security situation in eastern DR Congo.

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