GOMA, Congo — Rwandan support for rebels in neighboring Congo has waned but not ended in the past six months, according to a United Nations group of experts report.
In their mid-year report to the U.N. Security Council's Congo sanctions committee that became public Saturday, the group says the M23 rebel movement has continued recruiting in Rwanda "thanks to assistance from some sympathetic Rwandan officials." Some M23 deserters who fled to Rwanda also have been sent back to the rebels, it said.
But the group also reports "no evidence of full Rwandan army units supporting M23" since November when the rebels briefly occupied Goma, one of eastern Congo's biggest cities.
In 2012, the group of experts alleged that Rwanda's defense minister had been commanding the rebellion and that Rwandan army units had supported M23 at critical stages. Rwanda's government has vigorously denied the accusations.
The experts' latest findings suggest that insurgents in Congo are collaborating with the Congolese military as well as with Rwandan officials.
They report "enhanced collaboration" since November between some FARDC (Congolese army) units and the FDLR (Rwandan rebel Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda) in areas close to the M23.
In the past Rwanda has justified military intervention in Congo to protect itself against the FDLR, some of whose core members took part in the Rwandan genocide in 1994.
The experts say they have written to the governments of Rwanda and Congo asking for clarification about the reports of support to M23 and collaboration with FDLR and are awaiting replies.