Middle East & Africa | Roads to hell

Men with guns disrupt a plan to link Congo to east Africa

Some suspect the rebels are backed by Rwanda

TOPSHOT - A motorcyclist carries soldiers as others patrol the area in Kibumba that was attacked by M23 rebels in clashes with the Congolese army, near the town of Goma in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, June 1, 2022. (Photo by Guerchom Ndebo / AFP) (Photo by GUERCHOM NDEBO/AFP via Getty Images)
|Nairobi

Barely two months after the fanfare that greeted the Democratic Republic of Congo as the seventh member of the East African Community (eac), making it a bloc of 300m people stretching from the Indian Ocean to the Atlantic, blood is being spilt again in the troubled north-eastern corner of that vast, mineral-rich but chaotic country. The club’s other members had high hopes that, by pulling Congo’s economy eastwards, an array of infrastructure deals including roads and electric power lines would boost trade and prosperity across the region (see map).

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Roads to hell”

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