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Fighters from the M23 rebel group have captured the town of Morocco experienced record high temperatures this winter, and has blamed climate change, according to French news agency AFP.
Nyanzale from the military in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Temperatures in the North African country reached 37C. Morocco is facing its sixth consecutive year of drought.
"We are now in The ongoing drought is alarming as agriculture is a key economic sector.
Nyanzale, the enemy has fled,” rebel spokesperson Willy Ngoma told the BBC Morocco recorded the "hottest month of January since the first measurements in 1940," Houcine Youaabed, the head of communications for the meteorological department, told AFP.
Great Lakes service. Mr Youaabed said this reflects "the consequences of global warming".
Army
commander Jerome Chico Tshitambwe confirmed to the Reuters news agency that Nyanzale
has been taken by the rebels.
Nyanzale,
which is about 130km (80 miles) north of the city of Goma, had been a place of
refuge for people displaced by fighting in surrounding areas.
But earlier this week thousands of them fled again when Nyanzale came under fire.
Mr Ngoma said many had now returned to the town.
Isaac Kibira, a deputy to the governor in the nearby town of
Bambo, said M23 had been firing “indiscriminately” before taking Nyanzale.
“It
is since the morning that we noticed the capture of Nyanzale by the M23, and
the death toll rose to 15," Mr Kibira told Reuters.
The M23, formed as an offshoot of another rebel group, began
operating in 2012 - ostensibly to protect the local Tutsi population that has
long complained of persecution and discrimination.
Its fighters took up
arms again in 2021, saying promises in an earlier peace deal had been broken. M23 fighters are well equipped, but the group denies being a Rwandan proxy.
On Monday, the European
Union said it was "extremely concerned by the escalation of violence"
and called
for dialogue between DR Congo
and Rwanda in order to tackle the root causes of the conflict.
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