More than 100 fighters from a feared armed group in eastern Congo handed over their weapons in a ceremony in the country's violent North Kivu province today, officials said.
The president of the Rwandan Hutu rebel group known as the FDLR, Victor Byiringiro, said the move was aimed at contributing to peace in the region.
Congo's government spokesman said today's ceremony was a step in the right direction but that the military is still waiting for more than 1,400 fighters to surrender.
More From This Section
"The mission welcomes this development and calls on the FDLR commanders as well as rank-and-file to surrender," Dujarric said.
"It reports that all resources have been mobilized on a priority basis for a swift and well-organised transfer of ex-combatants to transit camps and later on to their final destination.
The FDLR has been active in eastern Congo ever since the 1994 genocide in neighboring Rwanda, when perpetrators of the killings fled into Congo.
Eastern Congo is home to a myriad of armed groups vying for control in the mineral-rich region.