Congo general condemns Ugandan military chief's threats

Lt. General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, the son of Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni, who leads the Ugandan army's land forces, looks on during his birthday party in Entebbe, Uganda May 7, 2022. REUTERS/Abubaker Lubowa/File Photo
A Congolese general expressed
"indignation" on Friday about social media comments by Uganda's
military chief that threatened to seize a city in northern Congo, reflecting
heightened diplomatic strains as the region spirals deeper into conflict.
The head of the Uganda People's
Defence Forces (UPDF) Muhoozi Kainerugaba made the threats last weekend in a
series of posts on X about an offensive by Rwandan-backed M23 rebels that has
captured east Congo's two largest cities since January.
The conflict, the biggest in
decades in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, has raised fears of a
wider regional war, with the armies of Congo, Rwanda and Burundi having all
participated in the fighting.
Uganda has had thousands of
troops in eastern Congo - north of the fighting with M23 - since 2021 to help
Congo fight another militia.
But it has also intervened in
past wars against Congo's government and was accused by U.N. experts last year
of providing support to M23, allegations it denied.
Rwanda also denies supporting
M23, saying its forces are acting in self-defence against Congo's army and
militias hostile to Kigali.
Kainerugaba, who is the son of
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni and regularly makes inflammatory social media
posts, threatened in one post to take Congo's fourth-largest city.
"UPDF will not oppose M23's
seizure of Kisangani. But they better move quickly otherwise we will do it
ourselves," he wrote.
Kainerugaba also threatened to
arrest the governor of Ituri Province, who he said was resisting UPDF's
operations.
General Jacques Ychaligonza, who
is in charge of operations and intelligence for Congo's military, was asked by
reporters about Kainerugaba's comments after a meeting with a Ugandan
counterpart in the city of Bunia.
"If it is true that this is
the Ugandan military chief's account, we have expressed our indignation,"
he said. "We told them that we are not at all happy about that."
Ychaligonza also said there had
been an incident earlier this month where Congolese forces had briefly
"blocked" Ugandan troops from crossing the border because they had
not been informed in advance of their arrival.
UPDF spokesperson Chris Magezi
said Ugandan forces had no ill will toward Congo and that the two countries
were working together closely.
"The X platform is not an
official channel, so people should not take it seriously," he told
Reuters.
In an interview, Congo's foreign
minister, Therese Kayikwamba Wagner, said the joint Congolese-Ugandan
operations against the Allied Democratic Forces, an Islamic State affiliate,
were going well.
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