Explainer

Why Congo and Rwanda Agreed to End Three Decades of War

M23 rebel soldiers in Goma in May.Photographer: Jospin Mwisha/AFP/Getty Images

Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda have agreed to bring an end to conflict in eastern Congo, where millions of people have died and multitudes have been displaced over the past three decades. A US-brokered accord signed in Washington on June 27 commits the two central African nations to stop fighting, halt their use of armed proxies and work together to develop the natural resources that lie along their shared border. There is well-founded skepticism over whether the truce will last. Distrust between the two long-standing foes runs deep and it’s unclear whether their forces and a multitude of militias will heed instructions to lay down their weapons.

More than 100 groups are engaged in ethnic disputes or fights over land, minerals and political representation in eastern Congo.