Uganda will not hand over to the Democratic Republic of
Congo M23 rebels who fled after a resounding military defeat, the
spokesman for the army and the defence ministry said Friday.
"They are not prisoners; they are soldiers running
away from a war so we are receiving them and helping them because it is
our responsibility," Colonel Paddy Ankunda told AFP, adding that Uganda
had also welcomed fleeing soldiers from the DRC's national army earlier
in the year.
The March 23 Movement, a group formed 18 months
ago, and which both Rwanda and Uganda have been accused of backing, was
defeated by the Congolese army with the backing of United Nations forces
and on Tuesday announced that it was putting an end to its military
operations.
Uganda military officers said Thursday that some 1,500 insurgents from the M23 had crossed the border and surrendered.
"They will not be handed over to DRC. The peace
agreement will determine, in matters of reintegration and reinsertion,
the fate of the M23 soldiers," Ankunda said, referring to an agreement
that was being negotiated under Ugandan mediation between the DR Congo
government and the M23 before the resounding military defeat.
A further 95 men, all wounded, sought refuge in
neighbouring Rwanda, where they are receiving medical treatment,
according to the local Red Cross.
Analysts have cast doubt on the figure of 1,500,
saying that the entire M23 force numbered only around 1,000 men at the
end of October.
They have suggested that the figure given by Uganda may include insurgents' family members.
SOURCE: AFRICA REVIEW
SOURCE: AFRICA REVIEW