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Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Cautious step as Congo, M23 agree to monitor ceasefire in Doha talks

Corneille Nangaa, leader of the Congo River Alliance, and Bertrand Bisimwa, head of the M23 Corneille Nangaa, leader of the Congo River Alliance, and Bertrand Bisimwa, head of the M23

Congo and the M23 rebel group signed an agreement on Tuesday for the monitoring of an eventual “permanent ceasefire”, a step towards potentially ending fighting in eastern Congo, according to sources on both sides and a copy seen by Reuters.

The agreement is a sign of progress in Qatar-mediated talks after the two sides missed an August 18 deadline to finalise a peace deal.

Qatar has hosted multiple rounds of direct talks between the Congo government and the rebels going back to April, but they have so far dealt largely with preconditions and confidence-building measures.

The ceasefire monitoring agreement was one of two key steps to complete before talks towards a comprehensive peace agreement could begin, the sources said. The second was a deal on a prisoner-of-war exchange that was signed in September, though the exchange itself has not happened.

M23 did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday. Congolese government spokesperson Patrick Muyaya confirmed the agreement had been signed.

Under the terms of the agreement, a ceasefire monitoring body will be formed featuring representatives of Congo, M23, and the 12-country International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR), according to the copy seen by Reuters.

This body will be mandated to investigate reports of alleged ceasefire violations and is expected to meet within no more than seven days after its creation.

The UN peacekeeping mission in Congo, known as Monusco, will be an “additional participant” and will “provide logistical coordination”.

M23 leader Bertrand Bisimwa told Reuters earlier this month that he opposed any operational role for Monusco in ceasefire monitoring, describing it as a belligerent actor because its mandate includes supporting Congo’s army.

Representatives from the African Union, Qatar, and the United States will participate as observers, the copy of the agreement said.

Rwanda-backed M23 staged a lightning offensive in eastern Congo this year, seizing the region’s two largest cities and spurring fighting that has killed thousands of people and displaced hundreds of thousands more.

Rwanda has long denied backing M23 and says its forces act in self-defence. But a group of UN experts said in a report in July that Kigali exercised command and control over the rebels.

US President Donald Trump’s administration brokered a separate peace deal between Congo and Rwanda in June. Trump has said he wants to bring peace to the region and facilitate investments in its minerals sector.

Trump has said the war is over, but Huang Xia, the UN special envoy for the Great Lakes region, told the UN Security Council on Monday that fighting continues.

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