- Trump blames 'diversity' for deadly Washington airliner collision
- Merkel slams successor over far-right support on immigration bill
- Stock markets firm on ECB rate cut, corporate results
- Mexican economy shrinks for first time in three years
- Nostalgia and escapism: highlights from Paris Couture Week
- UK prosecutors defend jail terms of environmental activists
- Qatari emir tells Syria leader 'urgent need' for inclusive government
- Dubai airport clocks record 92.3m passengers, extending hot streak
- US economic growth steady in 2024 as Trump takes office
- ECB cuts rate again as eurozone falters, with eye on Trump
- No survivors from plane, helicopter collision in Washington
- Richard Gere to be honoured at Spain's top film awards
- France, Germany stall eurozone growth in fourth quarter
- DR Congo leader vows 'vigorous' response as Rwanda-backed fighters advance
- European stock markets rise before ECB rate call
- Dubai airport sees record 92.3 million passengers in 2024
- Shell annual profit drops to $16 bn as oil prices fall
- UK car sector fears for Trump tariffs as output falls
- French economy shrinks as political crisis eclipses Olympic boost
- Plane carrying 64 collides with helicopter, crashes in Washington
- DR Congo leader says troops mounting 'vigorous' response to M23
- EU holds auto talks to revive embattled car sector
- Plane carrying more than 60 collides with helicopter, crashes in Washington
- ECB to look past Trump risk and push on with rate cuts
- Life's 'basic building blocks' found in asteroid samples
- Passenger plane collides with helicopter near Washington airport
- Tesla results miss estimates as company projects 2025 auto volume growth
- Meta posts big profit, aims to take AI lead
- Brazil central bank hikes interest rate as Lula's woes mount
- Global stocks mixed as market awaits ECB decision
- Tesla results miss estimates, citing lower vehicle prices
- US Fed pauses rate cuts, will 'wait and see' on Trump policies
- Rwanda-backed fighters advance into DR Congo after mostly seizing city
- US Fed pauses rate cuts, resisting Trump pressure
- Germany's far-right 'firewall' crumbles as migration debate flares
- With China's DeepSeek, US tech fears red threat
- Immigration 'flooding' remark row piles pressure on French PM
- Frenchman on trial for killing ex-partner after years of alleged abuse
- 'Less snow': warm January weather breaks records in Moscow
- Eurovision 2025 first tickets wave sells out in minutes
- Maison Margiela names new director during Paris Haute Couture Week
- German industry sounds alarm as government cuts growth forecast
- Rwanda-backed group controls most of DRC city as mediator urges talks
- The pioneering science linking climate to weather disasters
- Dreams of Britain warm migrants against harsh French winter
- Immigration row piles pressure on French PM after 'flooding' remark
- 'Good news': Dutch chip giant ASML welcomes DeepSeek
- 'Monte-Cristo', 'Emilia Perez' frontrunners at France's Cesar film awards
- Upstart DeepSeek faces heightened scrutiny as AI wows
- Stocks firm after tech rout; dollar steady before Fed rate call
Rwanda-backed fighters advance into DR Congo after mostly seizing city
Rwanda-backed fighters advanced on a second front in their lightning offensive across eastern DR Congo on Wednesday after seizing control of most of the key city of Goma during heavy fighting with the Congolese military.
The weeks-long advance by the M23 armed group has prompted calls from mediator Angola for urgent talks, as well rising international criticism and warnings of a looming humanitarian crisis.
DR Congo has called on the world to stop the march across the vast central African country's mineral-rich east, which has been wracked by decades of conflict that can be partly traced back to the 1994 Rwandan genocide.
The Congolese army has yet to make a statement about a new advance by the M23 in South Kivu province.
After days of intense clashes, calm returned to Goma, provincial capital of North Kivu, on Wednesday as residents started venturing from their homes.
"Today we are not afraid," Goma resident Jean de Dieu told AFP by telephone from the city of one million people wedged between Lake Kivu and the Rwandan border.
"There is hunger in Goma. We have to go get water from the lake and we have no medicine," another resident Kahindo Sifa said.
Despite international pressure to end the crisis, Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi declined to attend talks with his Rwandan counterpart Paul Kagame on Wednesday.
Angola, which mediated talks that fell through last month before M23 launched its offensive, called for the Congolese and Rwandan leaders to meet urgently in Luanda.
M23 fighters and Rwandan troops entered Goma on Sunday, progressively seizing the city's airport and other sites of the key mineral trading hub.
On Wednesday, the fighters faced no resistance in seizing the areas of Kiniezire and Mukwidja in neighbouring South Kivu, a local source and residents said.
The latest fighting has heightened an already dire humanitarian crisis in the region, causing food and water shortages and forcing half a million people from their homes this month, according to the United Nations.
Three days of clashes in Goma have left more than 100 dead and nearly 1,000 wounded, according to an AFP tally from the city's overflowing hospitals.
However, many more bodies are still to be recovered from the city's streets, a medic said.
- 'Cut off from world' -
While the fighting had ended in Goma, signs of its aftermath remained. Spent gun cartridges littered the streets, while buildings showed major damage from mortar blasts.
After many Congolese soldiers fled or were captured, the only forces in downtown Goma on Wednesday were M23 fighters or Rwandan soldiers, some firing guns into the air, AFP reporters said.
A long line of hundreds of Congolese soldiers and pro-Kinshasa militiamen, unarmed and wearing white headbands, were marched through the city's centre by M23 fighters, a security source said.
There was also widespread looting in the city, AFP journalists observed.
Student Merdi Kambelenge told AFP that the situation had "already stabilised" but said the lack of electricity meant "we're cut off from the world".
On the other side of the country, furious protesters in the capital Kinshasa on Tuesday attacked the embassies of various nations they accused of not stepping in to halt the chaos in the east.
After protesters burnt tyres in the streets and looted supermarkets, the authorities suspended all further protests in the capital, which remained calm on Wednesday.
The United States, which was among the nations whose embassy was targeted, ordered non-emergency staff and their family to leave the country.
DR Congo's former colonial ruler Belgium also warned its citizens against travelling to the country, while Brussels Airlines scrapped flights to Kinshasa.
- M23 advance 'will continue' -
The UN, US, China and European Union have all called on Rwanda to withdraw its forces from the region.
Rwanda's ambassador-at-large for the Great Lakes region Vincent Karega told AFP the M23 advance "will continue" into South Kivu.
It was even possible the fighters could push beyond the country's east -- even to Kinshasa, Karega added.
DR Congo has gold and other minerals such as cobalt, coltan, tantalum and tin used in batteries and electronics worldwide.
Kinshasa has accused Rwanda of waging the offensive to profit from the region's mineral wealth -- a claim backed by UN experts who say Kigali has thousands of troops in its neighbour and "de facto control" over the M23.
Rwanda has denied the accusations.
The Tutsi-led M23 briefly occupied Goma at the end of 2012 before being defeated by Congolese forces and the UN the following year.
burs-cld-dl/cw
P.Petrenko--CPN