KAGAME CAUGHT RED-HANDED: NEW UN REPORT CONFIRMS AGGRESSION AGAINST THE DRC
December 7, 2025
The silence is over.
On this December 7, 2025, UN experts dropped the bomb everyone had been waiting for — and that no one in Kigali wanted to hear:Between 6,000 and 7,000 Rwandan soldiers — two full brigades and elite battalions — are currently fighting on Congolese soil, side by side with the M23.Not “advisors.”
Not “volunteers.” Regular troops of the Rwandan army, in uniform or not, who shoot, loot, execute, and burn entire villages.
Report S/2025/920 is ice-cold.
It speaks of chain summary executions, of Hutu civilians shot because they had the misfortune of bearing the wrong name in the wrong neighborhood.
It speaks of hundreds of houses set on fire, of 12-year-old children torn from Rwandan refugee camps and thrown onto the front lines.
It speaks of one million new displaced people in a single year. And above all, it says something the UN had never dared to write so bluntly before: Rwanda is not merely “supporting” the M23. Rwanda is the M23.
It commands it, funds it, directs it. Full stop.
,
Paul Kagame struts around Washington, shakes hands, talks about “peace” and “regional stability.” Two days before the signing of the December 5 agreement under the auspices of Donald Trump, his soldiers were still trying to take Kamanyola, killing twenty Burundian soldiers and forcing thousands of Congolese to flee…
The irony is so massive it has become obscene.
Kigali, as always, denies everything. “Lies,” “Kinshasa propaganda,” “conspiracy.” The refrain is well-rehearsed. But satellite photos, radio interceptions, deserter testimonies, weapons stamped RDF found on M23 corpses — everything lines up.
Everything accuses. And this time, even the most cautious diplomats are starting to lose patience. Because the scandal is no longer just Rwandan. It is, above all now, international. Solemn agreements are signed on a Friday, everyone congratulates each other, selfies are taken.
By Monday, the same soldiers who were supposed to withdraw are filmed shelling yet another village. And no one dares to cancel invitations, freeze accounts, or cut aid. Kagame believes he is untouchable.
In eastern Congo, people no longer speak of “conflict.” They speak of cleansing. Of organized terror. Of war crimes in real time. And every day that passes without a real reaction from the international community buries a little deeper the credibility of all those who, not so long ago, called Paul Kagame “Africa’s Churchill.” The report is there.
In black and white. Undeniable. All that remains is to decide whether we keep turning a blind eye… or whether, at last, we act.
Eugène Diomi Ndongala,
Christian Democracy




