Rwanda's support of the rebels occupied a city in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, announcing unilateral ceasefire

The rebels supported by Rwanda occupied Gama City in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. On Monday, it announced unilateral ceasefire in the region for humanitarian reasons. Since then, it has called for a safe corridor for assistance and thousands of departures.

The M23 rebel said that the ceasefire will begin on Tuesday. The United Nations Health Institution stated that at least 900 people were killed in the battle between the rebels and the Congo forces last week.

The city of 2 million people is the core of a region with trillions of dollars of mineral wealth and is still under the control of rebels. According to reports, the M23 occupies the foundation in other parts of the East Congo and promoted to another provincial capital Bukavu.

But the rebels said on Monday that they did not intend to catch Bakif, although they expressed their ambitions to Kinshasa's ambition to the capital of the Congo earlier earlier.

"We must clearly show that we have no intention of capturing Bukavu or other regions. However, we reiterate our commitment to protect and defend civilians and our positions," M23 rebel spokesman Lawrence Kanyuka was in one Said in the statement.

The Congo government did not comment immediately.

The injured man recovered in a hospital in the Congo Gama on Monday.Michel Lunanga /Agence France-Presse-Getty image

The rebels were announced before the regional group joint summit of South Africa South Africa and the eastern region this week, and they called for a ceasefire. William Ruto, President of Kenya, said the Congo and President Rwida will participate.

Foreign Ministers from seven developed economies (G7) urged the parties in the conflict to return to negotiations. In a statement on Monday, they called for "the fast -moving humanitarian relief channel for civilians, safe and unhindered humanitarian relief channels."

The Congo authorities said they were willing to negotiate to resolve conflicts, but they had to have such a conversation in the context of previous peace agreements. Rwanda and the rebels accused the Congo government of defaulting to the previous agreement.

According to the United Nations experts, the M23 rebels were supported by about 4,000 troops adjacent to Rwanda, far exceeding 2012. At that time, they briefly captured Goma and then withdrew under international pressure. They are the most effective in more than 100 armed groups controlled by the East of the Congo. The team has huge deposits that are vital to many technologies in the world.

The latest battles forced thousands of people to be displaced due to years of conflict, in order to bring their own property and escape again. Thousands of people poured into the nearby Rwida.

The connection between the battle between the Congo and the racial conflict for decades.

On Monday, the Congo Red Cross and civil -protected members buried victims who had recently conflicted in the Goma cemetery.Alexis Huguet / AFP-Getty image

M23 said it was defending the Dulsi on the island of Congo. Rwanda claims that Tutsis was persecuted by Hutus, while the former militia made 800,000 Tutsis and others from RWANDA and others in 1994. Essence

After the extinction of the race, many people fled to the Congo and established democratic forces for the liberation of the Rwanda Militarian Group. Rwanda said the organization "fully incorporated" the Congo army, and the army denied the allegations.

On Monday, as the corpse bag was loaded on Goma's burial, he urgently hoped to identify the family of those besieged by his loved ones.

A crying Chiza Nyenyezi recalled that her son died after the bullet passed through the chest. "His entire chest was opened," Nyenyezi said.

Louise Shalukoma said that the son's body could not immediately recover from the street because when people tried to retrieve it, the bomb exploded.

"My God, my fourth child, when I saw him dead, I said," Lord, what should I do? "She sighed. "This M23 war brought me in Goma."