Congo files ICJ case against Rwanda over role in conflict
Security personnel stand guard as Congolese refugees living in Rwanda protest at various diplomatic missions, in Kigali, Rwanda January 7, 2026. REUTERS/Jean Bizimana
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The Democratic Republic of Congo has filed a case against
Rwanda at the International Court of Justice over its role in the long-running
conflict in the east, the government said on Friday.
In a statement, Congo accused Rwanda of breaching
international conventions, including those on genocide, racial discrimination
and torture.
Congo said the alleged crimes committed against civilians
included massacres, extrajudicial killings, torture, sexual violence, forced
displacement and discrimination that spanned over three decades.
Congo said Rwanda had dispatched forces and backed or
directed armed groups to
carry out unlawful military operations on its territory following the 1994 Rwandan genocide.
Congo is calling for the ICJ to order Rwanda to cease the
alleged violations and award reparations to Congo and its victims.
There was no immediate response from the Rwandan government.
Rwanda has consistently denied allegations that it backs any rebel groups
operating in Congo.
U.N. experts and Western governments have sided with Congo
in finding Rwanda responsible for providing support to M23, a major armed
group in the east.
The decades-long conflict
is rooted in the 1994 Rwandan genocide, after remnants of the forces associated
with the genocide fled across the border into eastern Congo.
This is the third time Congo has tried to bring a case
against Rwanda at the ICJ, which is the United Nations'
highest court and deals with disputes between states and alleged breaches of
international treaties.
The first case was dropped by the Congolese authorities in
2001, a second case was dismissed by
the ICJ in 2006 because the court found it did not have jurisdiction because
Rwanda had either not signed, or made reservations, or did not meet all the conditions in the treaties cited in Congo's case.

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