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East Congo militia attacks UN base, 2 rebels killed

Militia fighters in eastern Congo attacked a UN peacekeeping base on Friday, triggering clashes that left two of the fighters dead and two peacekeepers slightly wounded, the UN mission say.

Rare frontal assault hits UN forces charged with protecting civilians in Congo's east

Peacekeepers from Pakistan, serving in the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in Congo, patrol the streets of Uvira, South Kivu, on Saturday. (Crispin Kyala/Reuters)

Militia fighters in eastern Congo attacked a UN peacekeeping base on Friday, triggering clashes that left two of the fighters dead and two peacekeepers slightly wounded, the UN mission said.

Thirty-four rebels from a Mai-Mai militia have been killed during fighting with Congo's army in the past week, local army spokesperson Jules Ngongo said, a spike in violence he attributed to an army crackdown on the militia's harassment of local residents.

Friday's attack, in which two rebels were also wounded, was a rare frontal assault on UN forces charged with protecting civilians in Congo's east, where dozens of armed groups exploit mineral resources and prey on local residents.

UN peacekeepers in the Congo drive into their compound after patrolling the streets during mass protests against President Joseph Kabila in Kinshasa last April. (Robert Carrubba/Reuters)

"Very early this morning, about 30 Mai-Mai attacked," mission spokesperson Florence Marchal told Reuters, adding that UN forces drove off the assailants. It was not immediately clear which Mai-Mai group attacked or what their objective was. The Mai-Mai comprise a number of armed bands that originally formed to resist Rwandan invasions in the 1990s.

They have since morphed into a wide variety of ethnic-based militia, smuggling networks and protection rackets. Congo's mineral-rich eastern borderlands are a tinderbox of ethnic tensions and for more than two decades have been racked by violence that has often spilled across the country's borders.

President Joseph Kabila's refusal to step down at the end of his constitutional mandate last December has fuelled further unrest in the country's east, where wars between 1996-2003 killed millions, and at its centre, where an insurgency against the central government has killed thousands since last August.

Peacekeepers in Congo patrol the streets of Kinshasa in December, 2016. (Thomas Mukoya/Reuters)

Last week, UN forces in east Congo's South Kivu province intervened with helicopters and heavy machine guns to help beat back an advance by a separate rebel group on the strategic city of Uvira. The UN mission in Congo, known as MONUSCO, is the world's largest with some 18,000 uniformed personnel and a more than $1 billion annual budget.