The military governor of Democratic Republic of Congo’s North’s province, Maj.-Gen. Peter Cirimwami Nkuba, has died from gunshot wounds suffered on the front line during an offensive by M23 rebels, the army said on Friday.
The army spokesman Sylvain Ekenge said at a press briefing.
The rebels are advancing on two fronts near the provincial capital Goma in the nation’s turbulent east, where tens of thousands are fleeing and the UN is warning that the violence could spill into a wider regional war.
The UN Security Council will meet on Monday to discuss the situation, diplomats said.
Ekenge said Nkuba was wounded “on the field” and evacuated to the capital Kinshasa, where he succumbed to his injuries.
He did not provide any further details on the circumstances.
Fighting has flared more fiercely in Congo’s mineral-rich east since the start of the year as the Tutsi-led M23 group seized control of more territory than ever before.
After seizing the town of Minova on Tuesday, the rebels moved into the town of Sake, around 20 km (12 miles) west of Goma, the provincial capital and home to more than one million people.
They have also attacked along the main road from the north of the city, cutting off main supply routes.
On Friday, the rebel Congo River Alliance (AFC), which includes M23, said they planned to take Goma.
The UN peacekeeping mission in Congo, MONUSCO, said that its heavy artillery had carried out fire missions over the past 48 hours against M23 positions in Sake, and repositioned its forces to strategic locations to reinforce its deployment in and around Goma.
Nine peacekeepers have been injured, UN spokesperson Farhan Haq said on Friday.
Congo and the UN accuse neighbouring Rwanda of fuelling the three-year insurgency with its own troops and weapons.
Rwanda has denied this however.
M23 takes its name from a March 23, 2009, agreement between the Congolese government and previous rebels.
The rebels said the government had violated the deal.
They say they defend Tutsi interests against ethnic Hutu militias whose leaders participated in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.
The number of people displaced by the fighting this year has doubled to 400,000 since last week, UN refugee agency UNHCR said, warning that hospitals were nearing capacity.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) reported a “cruel” lack of medical supplies in Goma, with patients left waiting in corridors, medical staff forced to flee, and wounds from gunfire and explosions only being treated after days.
“We witness medical staff wounded by bullets when they have chosen to stay to provide treatment,” said Myriam Favier, head of the ICRC Goma sub-delegation.
She noted that a growing proportion of wounded were women and children.
Virunga Energies, a privately-held utility in the province said in a statement that its electricity transmission lines along the Kibumba-Goma road north of the city, were damaged on Friday due to the fighting.
(Reuters/NAN)