Rwanda accused of sending troops into DRC
The Democratic Republic of Congo accuses Rwandan troops of supporting rebels. North Korea prepares unprecedented missile launch. Islamabad rocked by car bomb blast. And much more in today's update.
9 - 10 - 2008
Rwanda has been accused of sending its troops
across the border into the Democratic Republic of Congo and threatening the
eastern city of Goma.
Reports suggest the Congolese rebel leader Laurent Nkunda, backed by Rwandan
soldiers, crossed the border three days ago. UN peacekeepers have reported heavy
fighting around an army base at the border village of Rumangabo,
near Goma.
The toD verdict: Fighting resumed in August between Nkunda's forces and the
Congolese army, despite a peace deal signed in January. Last week, the rebel
leader announced he would
escalate his 4-year-old revolt. Nkunda has led a rebellion in North Kivu in
defence of Congo's
minority Tutsi community which has been terrorized by Rwandan rebels known as the
Democratic Forces for the Liberation
of Rwanda (FDLR). Formed from ethnic Hutu extremists,
who fled to DR Congo after the Rwandan genocide of 1994, Nkunda claims
the FDLR are supported
by the DRC's army. Keep up to date with the latest developments and sharpest perspectives in a world of strife and struggle.
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Rwanda
agrees. According
to Rwanda's UN Ambassador Joseph Nsengimana, only last week Kigali sent a letter to
the DRC citing reports of collusion between Congolese troops and the FDLR. He denied that any of
its troops are inside the DR Congo. However, Rwanda has twice invaded its
neighbour on similar pretexts.
It is clear that the presence of FDLR rebels in DR Congo lies at the heart of
years of recent unrest in the region, including this fresh humanitarian crisis
which is brewing, with more than 100,000 people already fleeing the clashes. The DRC government has
said it is ready
to disarm the Hutu rebels, and should make good on this promise. Doing so would
greatly improve regional prospects for peace, security and stability.
Pakistan troops
kill 20 militants in tribal area
At least twenty Al Qaeda-linked militants,
eight of them foreigners, were killed
in Bajaur region Wednesday. Pakistani helicopter gunships hit rebel hideouts in
a tribal region near the Afghan border.
Pakistani troops launched a major
offensive in the region against Islamic militants in August triggering the Red
Cross to classify
the area as a war zone. Earlier this week Pakistan ordered the deportation
of 50,000 Afghan refugees which they claim are linked to militant groups.
The Pakistani military says more than
1,000 rebel fighters have been killed since it launched its offensive in Bajaur
in early August, including Al Qaeda's operational commander in the region,
the Egyptian Abu Saeed Al-Masri.
Suicide bomb kills 10 in Iraq
Ten people were killed
and twenty seven wounded on Wednesday after a suicide bomber blew herself up in
the capital of Diyala Province,
Iraq. This attack, near the Court of Appeals building in
Baquba, was the seventeenth by a woman in Diyala
this year. A police official speculated that the bomber's failed target appeared
to have been Uday al-Khadran, a leading member of the Shia party the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq. Inter-communal
tensions run high in Diyala; Shia power in the province is deeply resented
by the majority Sunni population.
The attack came a day after Iraqi security forces
arrested a woman accused of heading up
the recruitment of female suicide bombers.
North Korea prepares missile test
South Korea's military is on high alert today. Local newspapers have reported that North Korea
is preparing an unprecedented mass test-launch of ten short-range missiles from
the island navy base of Chodo.
Analysts are speculating whether the incident is a response to the South's
current armed forces celebrations,
or may be related to the anniversary of North Korea's ruling communist
party, on Friday. Others argue
the sabre-rattling is a deliberate tactic used by Pyongyang
in its dispute with the US
over nuclear disarmament. On
Wednesday, South Korea's
top military official, Gen Kim Tae-young, said he believed
the North was trying to develop a nuclear warhead to fit on a missile. North Korea
tested a nuclear device in October 2006, but it was not believed that any of
the bombs were small enough to be fitted onto a missile.
Car bomb explodes at Islamabad Police HQ
A suspected suicide car bombing
demolished a building at an Islamabad
police headquarters today. Casualty figures are currently unclear. The attack
happened as intelligence and military chiefs were briefing lawmakers on the
campaign against Islamist extremists, in a rare hearing at the parliament
building about three kilometres from the explosion. Pakistan faces a rising tide of
militant activity. Less than three weeks ago, a suicide truck bombing at the
Marriott Hotel in Islamabad killed 60 people in one
of the worst terror attacks in Pakistan's
history.
Yom Kippur riots in Acre
Inter-communal riots
broke out in Acre today after an Israeli Arab
man drove his car during the Yom Kippur religious holiday. The driver,
who claimed he was simply returning to a property he owned in the East of the
city, was attacked by youths who said he was making noise intentionally. In
much of Israel
it is considered offensive to drive during Yom Kippur, a Jewish day of
fasting. Rioting erupted between Arabs
and Jews, with hundreds of people taking to the streets and damaging cars and
shops. The city has a highly mixed population. "We will deal with all the
rioters and those who take the law into their own hands with an iron fist," the
head of the Acre police station, Chief
Superintendent Avi Edri.
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