Kenya says 'disassociates' with DR Congo rebels alliance
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Kenya's foreign ministry said on Sunday it "strongly disassociates" with a Congolese opposition figure who forged an alliance with rebels in Nairobi, spurring diplomatic furry with Kinshasa.
Corneille Nangaa, ex-head of Congo's electoral commission, announced on Friday in a hotel in the Kenyan capital that he was creating a political-military alliance with M23 rebels and other armed groups.
The move sparked an angry response from the Congolese government who warned Kenya of "consequences" for hosting him.
"Kenya strongly disassociates itself from any utterances or activities likely to injure the peace and security of the friendly Nation of DRC," Foreign Minister Musalia Mudavadi said in a statement.
Mudavadi said Kenya had begun investigations "to determine the identities of the makers of the statement and the extent to which their utterances fall outside constitutionally protected speech".
He defended the fact that the "freedom of the press is vouchsafed" in Kenya and anyone was free to engage the media without reference to the government.
Nangaa, who was president of the electoral commission for the DRC's 2018 polls, said that at least nine armed groups, including the M23, had already joined him in his alliance for "national unity and stability".
The announcement came at a time when the political and security climate in the DRC is extremely tense in the run-up to December 20 presidential elections.
Nangaa justified the creation of the alliance as a response to the "weakness" of the Congolese state over three decades and its "inability to restore authority... throughout the country".
But the Congolese government denounced Nangaa's announcement as "unpatriotic behaviour", and vowed diplomatic consequences for Kenya for hosting subversive activities.
"Kenya owes us an explanation", Communication Minister Patrick Muyaya said on Friday evening.
Kinshasa swiftly summoned the Kenyan ambassador in the DRC on Saturday and also recalled its ambassadors to Nairobi for consultation.
Some seven million Congolese are currently displaced within their own country, mainly as a result of armed conflicts and insecurity, according to the International Organization for Migration.
In recent months, a series of clashes between Nangaa and Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi have hit the headlines.
After several years of dormancy, the M23 ("March 23 Movement") rebels took up arms again in late 2021 and seized vast swathes of the eastern province of North Kivu.
Western governments and the United Nations have said neighbouring Rwanda has supported the M23, allegations Kigali denies.