31-03-2022
Bureau Report
GOMA, DR CONGO/ ISLAMABAD: UN investigators said Wednesday they had not ruled out any avenue in a probe into a helicopter crash in eastern DR Congo that killed eight UN peacekeepers, although one lead was a “shining object” that may have caused the incident.
Six Pakistanis, a Russian and a Serb were killed when a Puma helicopter with the UN mission MONUSCO crashed while on reconnaissance over the troubled region on Tuesday.
Military authorities in North Kivu province have accused the M23 rebel group of downing the chopper, though the faction denies the charge and instead blames the Congolese army.
“The initial preliminary observations of our force headquarters describe a crash that may have been caused by a shining object,” Khassim Diagne, the deputy special representative for protection and security at MONUSCO, told the French radio station RFI.
The mission’s deputy spokeswoman Ndeye Khady Lo confirmed this account.
“The wreckage of the helicopter has been located, an inquiry is underway and should be able to ascertain more about the nature of this object,” she said.
The crash seems to have an “external” cause, she said, but stressed it was “premature” to rule out an accident.
Diagne, in his remarks to RFI, said that investigators were not ruling out any scenario, including “an attack”.
UN ‘deeply concerned’
The bodies of the eight peacekeepers have been taken to Goma, North Kivu’s capital, MONUSCO said on Wednesday.
The helicopter came down in the Tchanzu area of Rutshuru Territory, where the army and the M23 rebels had been fighting the day before.
The M23, its name derives from “March 23 Movement”, emerged years ago from an ethnic Tutsi Congolese rebellion in North Kivu that was once supported by Rwanda and Uganda.
The group was defeated by the army in 2013 but has resurfaced since November, accused of staging several raids on military positions around Rutshuru.
UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric Wednesday did not blame the M23 group for the crash but he said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “deeply concerned by the resurgence of M23 activities in the border area between the DRC close to Rwanda and Uganda.”
The movement claims the authorities in the capital Kinshasa have failed to respect commitments undertaken to ease the demobilization and integration of its combatants.
The crash came after the Congolese army accused Rwanda of backing the M23, charges Kigali denied on Tuesday.
After months of suspicion and decades of mistrust between DR Congo and its neighbor Rwanda, the Congolese army claimed they had captured two Rwandan soldiers on Monday in the area of the fighting.