THE Democratic Republic of Congo's M23 rebel group has declared an end to its 20-month insurgency and said it was ready to pursue a political solution after the army captured its last two hilltop strongholds.
The M23 made its announcement hours after government forces drove the rebels out of Tshanzu and Runyoni before dawn, following a two-week offensive that cornered the insurgents in heavily wooded hills along the border with Uganda and Rwanda.
M23 leader Bertrand Bisimwa said: "The chief of staff and the commanders of all major units are requested to prepare troops for disarmament, demobilisation and reintegration on terms to be agreed with the government of Congo."
The US welcomed the declaration as a "significant positive step" for eastern Congo, a region beset for more than 15 years by conflict fuelled by competition for gold, copper and cobalt as well as cross-border ethnic tensions.
A meeting of regional leaders in South Africa said earlier yesterday that President Joseph Kabila's government would sign a peace deal within days if rebels laid down their arms.
The move marked a dramatic turnaround for the 42-year-old leader. Only a year ago, M23 had swept aside UN peacekeepers and the army to capture Goma, the largest town in eastern Congo.
That defeat led to the deployment of a tough new UN Intervention Brigade and to increased diplomatic pressure on neighbouring Rwanda and Uganda not to meddle in the conflict, changing the tide of events. M23 has been riven by defections and factional fighting.
Martin Kobler, head of a 19,850-member UN peacekeeping mission in Congo, said attention would turn to scores of smaller armed groups operating in the lawless east, including the Rwandan Hutu FDLR.
"We have teeth and we are using those teeth," Mr Kobler said, referring to the 3000-strong Intervention Brigade.
The M23 is the latest manifestation of simmering anger with Kinshasa among ethnic Tutsis in eastern Congo and the real test will be whether government and rebels can reach a lasting political deal. M23 took up arms last year when a previous 2009 peace accord with the Tutsi-led CNDP rebels unravelled.
Russell Feingold, US special envoy to the Great Lakes region, said the issues of an amnesty and reintegration of rebels into the army were vital to ensuring a durable deal.
He added: "In a region that has suffered so much, this is obviously a significant positive step in the right direction."
Mr Feingold voiced confidence that Rwanda, accused by UN experts of backing the M23, now supported ending the insurgency. Kigali has repeatedly denied backing the rebels.
Those suspected of serious rights violations should be pursued and should not be covered by any amnesty, he added. Analysts said M23's military leader Sultani Makenga was among those unlikely to benefit from any amnesty deal.
Congolese government spokesman Laurent Mende said many M23 fighters had surrendered after government soldiers seized control of the rebel hideouts of Tshanzu and Runyoni.
The rebels deserted their positions, setting fire to munitions depots and military trucks before fleeing into forests, a senior Congolese army commander said.
Paddy Ankunda, a Ugandan army spokesman, said more than 80 M23 fighters had fled into Uganda where they were being held until a diplomatic decision was made on their fate. M23's military leader Makenga has not been located.
The Rwandan Hutu FDLR will likely be the next priority for Congo's army and UN troops.T
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