News Flash

GOMA, DR Congo, Oct 31, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - The M23 armed group, which
controls large parts of eastern DR Congo, on Friday described a call by the
French president to reopen Goma airport as "inopportune".
President Emmanuel Macron said the key airport would open "in the coming
weeks" for humanitarian flights, during an international conference on
Thursday on the crisis in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
The region -- bordering Rwanda with abundant natural resources but plagued by
non-state armed groups -- has suffered extreme violence for more than three
decades.
The crisis intensified with the 2021 resurgence of the M23 -- a Rwandan-
backed armed group fighting the Kinshasa authorities -- and came to a head
early this year when the militia seized the key cities of Goma and Bukavu.
Goma airport was the scene of fierce fighting during the city's capture in
January and has since remained closed.
The M23, which was not invited to the Paris conference on supporting peace
and prosperity in the Great Lakes region, "considers inopportune France's
call for the reopening" of Goma airport, spokesman Lawrence Kanyuka said in a
statement.
"Such an initiative must only be undertaken within the framework of
negotiations currently under way in Doha under Qatari mediation," he added.
The Congolese government and the M23 signed a declaration of principles on
July 19 in Qatar that included a "permanent ceasefire" aimed at halting the
conflict.
It followed a separate US-brokered peace deal between the Congolese and
Rwandan governments signed in Washington in June.
However, efforts to end the conflict have proved slow to take effect on the
ground.
Rwandan Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe has also expressed doubts.
"Paris cannot reopen an airport, as the primary stakeholders are absent," he
said on Thursday, referring to the M23 group.
Humanitarian officials have voiced doubts, too, about a possible reopening
and underlined that the land route remains essential for delivering aid to
areas under M23 control.
The M23 said in its statement that there was "no longer a humanitarian
emergency" in areas under its control.
After seizing Goma, the M23 ordered displaced people living on the outskirts
of the city to return home and in a few days emptied makeshift camps where
hundreds of thousands had been living in dire conditions.
The Paris conference raised more than 1.5 billion euros ($1.7 billion) in
international aid for the region, Macron announced.