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    The promise and risks of Kenya’s ambitious new strategy to close refugee camps

    The promise and risks of Kenya’s ambitious new strategy to close refugee camps

    Al Qaeda-linked militants curb their brutality in seized Malian territory

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    Five Years After the Coup in Mali: Are Stability and Growth Within Reach?

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    Ghana to evacuate 300 citizens from South Africa after xenophobic attacks

    Xenophobic Violence and Human Security in South Africa: Causes and Consequences

    Inside an African lab that helped crack the hantavirus outbreak

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    Nigeria’s Agricultural sector: Problems and challenges

    Agriculture in Africa: science and research cannot have an impact without investments and good policies

    Mali’s junta creates a new ministerial-level post to oversee the mining sector

    African Mineral Resources: The Controversial Link to US Health Deals

    Ghana curbs offshore investments to protect cedi, boost stability

    Ghana’s mining law attempts to eradicate speculation, but leaves communities in limbo: insights from a lithium case study

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    Schooling is the most severely affected by conflict when children are the target – Study

    Schooling is the most severely affected by conflict when children are the target – Study

    Pensions for Botswana’s elderly are expanding, but care services are lacking—study follows 20 years

    Pensions for Botswana’s elderly are expanding, but care services are lacking—study follows 20 years

    60 new cosmic structures have been discovered by South Africa’s MeerKAT telescope, which is mapping previously unseen gaps between galaxies

    60 new cosmic structures have been discovered by South Africa’s MeerKAT telescope, which is mapping previously unseen gaps between galaxies

    Benin government says armed forces foil coup attempt

    Coup contagion? A rash of African power grabs suggests copycats are taking note of others’ success

    One in three South Africans have never heard of AI: what this means for policy

    One in three South Africans have never heard of AI: what this means for policy

    Social Media as a Catalyst for the Spread of Dangerous Wealth Ritual Myths

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    Overcoming Education Barriers for Young Mothers in Sub-Saharan Africa

    Overcoming Education Barriers for Young Mothers in Sub-Saharan Africa

    Youth Empowerment Through Vocational Training in Rural Sub-Saharan Africa

    Youth Empowerment Through Vocational Training in Rural Sub-Saharan Africa

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    Manufacturers in Ghana and Nigeria claim that although corruption damages businesses, digital technologies provide a chance to combat it

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    Abebe Bikila (1932-1973): Ethiopian marathoner and first black African to win an Olympic medal

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    W. E. B. Du Bois (1868-1963): Sociologist, historian, and Pan-Africanist civil rights activist

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    Frantz Fanon (1925-1961): Psychiatrist and political philosopher

    Percy Lavon Julian (1899-1975): African American researcher and chemist

    Percy Lavon Julian (1899-1975): African American researcher and chemist

    Harriet Tubman (Araminta Ross, 1822-1913): American abolitionist and social activist

    Harriet Tubman (Araminta Ross, 1822-1913): American abolitionist and social activist

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    Dorothy Vaughan (1910-2008): African American mathematician and human computer

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Land quarrels in rebel-occupied Congo threaten Trump peace deal

September 7, 2025
Land quarrels in rebel-occupied Congo threaten Trump peace deal

An M23 rebel walks on the outskirts of Matanda which is controlled by M23 rebels, in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, March 22, 2025. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra/File Photo

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Returning to land they fled during a violent advance by M23 rebels, some farmers in eastern Congo have had an unwelcome surprise: Their fields of cauliflower and cabbage have been taken over by newcomers, including Rwandans.

The resulting tensions could complicate efforts to bring peace and investment to a war-hit region that produces strategic minerals such as coltan, cobalt, copper and lithium.

Rwanda and Congo signed a peace deal brokered by U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration in June. Peace talks between Congo and M23 in Doha were expected to produce a deal last month but have been delayed.

The problem of land disputes became so widespread – with hundreds of cases documented, according to unpublished U.N. data seen by Reuters – that M23 created an “arbitration centre” to resolve them, a senior rebel official said.

“Land conflicts can always fuel violence if they are not properly addressed and if state structures are not sufficiently strong and equipped to manage them,” said Fred Bauma, head of the Congolese research group Ebuteli.

“As part of the Doha agreements, this issue will have to be addressed.”

Abdu Djuma Burunga, 49, fled the breadbasket town of Kibumba three years ago, towards the start of a resurgence by Rwanda-backed M23 that led to its blitz through North and South Kivu provinces this year.

The fighting has killed thousands of people and displaced hundreds of thousands. But Alliance Fleuve Congo, the rebel coalition that includes M23, now wants to show it can govern and restore order. Its forces have dismantled camps where people such as Burunga sought shelter and urged – or forced – them to go home.

When he returned to Kibumba in April, Burunga found his wooden house, in good shape when he left, in shambles. His fields were being worked by strangers who “took our belongings and occupied our fields,” he said.

They wore civilian clothes and drank beer with M23 combatants, chatting in the Rwandan language of Kinyarwanda, said Burunga, who has met the group of five and watched them come and go across the border.

Reuters could not independently confirm their identity and nationality.

Though he appealed to M23-appointed local officials, Burunga had to wait four months to get his land back, so the new arrivals could harvest what they had planted. He retook possession of the land in August.

HUNDREDS OF CASES

Elsewhere in Kibumba, Rwandan newcomer Mukumunana Penina said she knew she was farming land that belonged to a Congolese farmer who fled. She told Reuters she came to the land without M23 encouragement.

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“This field belongs to a Congolese citizen. I don’t even know his name. I occupied it by planting potatoes there. I’m Rwandan, I only occupied this field to survive,” she said.

Reuters interviewed six displaced Congolese who returned to land in eastern Congo only to find it occupied.

United Nations refugee agency survey results from February and March, seen by Reuters, identified 200 families in Goma, eastern Congo’s biggest city, who said they were unable to return to their farmland, in many cases because others were living and working on it.

The figure represents about 10% of those surveyed. The survey did not specify who had taken over the land.

Occupation by Rwandans is a charged topic. A report by U.N. experts published in July said Rwanda had exercised command and control over M23 and Kigali was focused partly on “conquering additional territories” in the region.

Kigali denies helping M23 but acknowledges deploying forces in eastern Congo that it says act in self-defence against Congo’s army and ethnic Hutu militiamen.

A Rwandan government spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on whether Kigali was trying to seize land in eastern Congo.

The senior rebel official denied most newcomers were Rwandans, describing them as ethnic Congolese Tutsis who, fearful of ethnic Hutu militias, had crossed the border since the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

The rebel official said the arbitration centre was established after M23 seized Goma, and that sometimes newcomers agreed to leave and sometimes newcomers and returnees agreed to share land.

The official said there was no policy of seizing land, but acknowledged that some land-related rebel abuses had occurred.

Source: Reuters
Tags: Doha agreementseastern CongoM23 rebels

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