Saturday, October 25, 2025

Who is Rashid Salim Mohammad,a Kenya ADF captured in DRC in 2022?Is he still held in the prisons of DRC??

 To date, the Congolese population has not yet been informed about the fate reserved by the Congolese military justice system for radical Islamist Rashid Salim Mohammed, aka Chotara or Turki, a Kenyan citizen responsible for beheading civilians and soldiers in ADF/ISCAP propaganda videos broadcast by the Islamic State.


A brilliant young student, Rashid Salim Mohammed was sent to Turkey to continue his computer science studies. Some time later, the Turkish authorities deported him to Kenya for attempting to reach Syria (the headquarters of Daesh).


Arriving in Kenya, he was charged and convicted of terrorism. Having escaped from prison, his country's Criminal Investigation Directorate announced on November 9, 2021, the availability of 10,000,000 Kenyan shillings as a reward for information leading to the arrest of this fugitive.





Arrested in January 2022 in Mantubi, a village located between the territory of Beni and the province of Ituri, Rashid Salim Mohammed will be taken to Kinshasa via the city of Beni. His trial had begun, but little is known about its future course.


After his arrest in DRC, Kenya's counterterrorism authorities contacted those of Congo Kinshasa via INTERPOL (USA) to also question Rashid Salim Mohammed.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Is it Rwanda or M23,How did M23 get these polish equipments?Rwanda's Electronic Warfare System Exposes Its Limitations

 





FARDC Regains the Advantage After Neutralizing Polish WB Group Equipment


Kalembe, Masisi Territory – October 21, 2025

Images authenticated by Congolese security sources show several electronic devices abandoned by the M23-RDF-AFC coalition forces on the Kalembe front, in Masisi Territory, North Kivu.


This equipment, branded MindMade WB Group (Poland), was reportedly used for jamming and electronic warfare operations before being neutralized or abandoned during the final advances of the DRC Armed Forces (FARDC).


Is Jamming Network Now Ineffective


The modules recovered on the ground, equipped with antennas and signal amplifiers, were part of a sophisticated system designed to jam the control frequencies of Congolese drones and intercept certain military communications. However, recent strikes by FARDC CH-4 drones, deployed from Goma, revealed that this electronic warfare system had lost its effectiveness.


"These devices were found intact, abandoned in haste. Their operators fled after Monday evening's drone strike," said a local military source.

"This proves that the Polish system was unable to withstand the FARDC's electronic countermeasures."


Is it a proof of Polish-Rwandan Cooperation 


The labels visible on the modules bear the words "MindMade – WB Group – SAS," a subsidiary of the Polish giant WB Electronics, a renowned supplier of communications and military jamming technologies. This discovery confirms suspicions of technological cooperation between Kigali and Warsaw, long cited in regional intelligence reports.


According to Congolese experts, these devices were used to disrupt GPS signals, destabilize CH-4 drone transmissions, and mask the position of rebel troops.

However, the recent adaptation of FARDC communication protocols has rendered these systems obsolete.


"The new frequencies of Chinese drones and the dynamic encryption adopted by the FARDC render these Western equipment calibrated for standard signals ineffective," analyzes a Nairobi-based electronic warfare specialist.


Is FARDC Regaining the Initiative on the Ground


The intensification of drone strikes since October 18, particularly around Kalembe, Mweso, and Tongo, demonstrates that the FARDC now controls the electromagnetic spectrum of the battlefield. By combining visual intelligence, digital interception, and targeted strikes, the Congolese army is thwarting the rebel groups' escape strategies.


Congolese officers claim that the Polish jamming system, used by forces allied with the RDF, did not prevent Congolese drones from detecting and striking several rebel logistics caches and arsenals. "We have crossed a threshold. Rwanda and its allies were losing their digital invisibility. What they were installing in our forests no longer protects them," commented a security analyst.


Is Symbolic to a setback for Kigali


Beyond the material loss, this episode represents a strategic and symbolic setback for the Rwandan military, renowned for its technological superiority in the region. The fact that these WB Group modules were abandoned on Congolese soil without having achieved their tactical objectives illustrates a reverse technological saturation effect: technical superiority no longer guarantees victory.

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

23 people sentenced for belonging to the ADF

 


The Beni military court handed down prison sentences of 5 to 20 years to 23 people convicted of belonging to or collaborating with the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) on October 6, 2025. The convicts must also pay 400,000 FCFA each.


Offenses: terrorism, participation in an insurrectional movement, financing of terrorism, illegal possession of weapons.


Acquittals: 7 defendants, insufficient evidence.


Deaths in custody: 5 defendants, prosecution discontinued.


Special case: 1 woman suspected of mental illness, case suspended.


Among those convicted are Kasereka Katrisia Judson (20 years old), Mumbere Birere Jérémie (20 years old), and two women (15 years each). The trial continues for the remaining .

UPDF Proposes Creation of Local Defense Forces to Secure Areas Liberated from the ADF

Watch the video:


The new commander of Ugandan troops operating jointly with the FARDC, Major General Stéven Mugerwa, has proposed the establishment of Local Defense Forces to strengthen security in areas affected by the ADF.


"I have asked the governor to inform his superiors to create Local Defense Forces to counter the ADF's maneuvers, which bypass our positions and then attack the population after the strikes," he said.


This approach aims to ensure continued community protection while the army continues its hunt for rebels. This system had already proven its worth in Uganda, during the fight against Joseph Kony's Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), a group just as brutal as the ADF.


Monday, October 6, 2025

New clashes between M23 and Wazalendo in Luke.





Since the early hours of Monday, violent clashes have been taking place between AFC/M23 rebels and Wazalendo fighters in Masisi territory, North Kivu, causing panic and the flight of residents.


According to local sources, hostilities erupted around 5:00 a.m. in Luke, where heavy and light weapons fire is still being heard. The AFC/M23 rebels have reportedly launched an offensive aimed at dislodging the Wazalendo from their positions in order to extend their control over the area.


This new escalation comes barely a month after the return of residents of Luke, recently recaptured by the Wazalendo. Faced with the resumption of fighting, several families have fled to the bush, fearing for their safety.


The situation remains extremely tense and uncertain. The local population is calling for rapid intervention to ensure their protection and restore peace.


Furthermore, despite the resumption of negotiations in Doha between representatives of the AFC/M23 and the Congolese government, both sides continue to reinforce their positions with troops and equipment on the front lines in North and South Kivu.

Saturday, October 4, 2025

How and Why Gen. Byamungu and Lt. Col Willy Ngoma, M23 Officers, Were Once Detained by Gen Makenga




The Commander-in-Chief of the AFC/M23 Army, Major General Sultani Makenga, has recently detained some of his senior officers for various crimes they committed in areas under his control.


These crimes include looting and illegal trade, mainly in precious minerals.


Those sentenced to short prison terms include well-known M23 soldiers, as well as Makenga's brother.


Among those sentenced by Gen. Sultani Makenga is the former M23 Army commander in Goma, Col. Jimmy Nzamuye, who has recently been released. Before his arrest and detention in Tchanzu, he was suspected of using his position to amass wealth.


After his release, Gen. Makenga immediately removed him from command of the army in Goma and made him responsible for planning operations in the second military region operating in Masisi.


My intelligence Sources also say that last September, Brigadier General Bernard Maheshe Byamungu, who is currently the Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the M23 Army in charge of operations and intelligence, also spent a week in detention. The decision to detain him was reportedly taken by the M23 Disciplinary Commission.


Byamungu was allegedly being investigated for the seizure and sale of seven villas that once belonged to the DRC government.


Sources deep inside the M23 core military administration  also say that Gen. Makenga continues to closely monitor the land disputes Byamungu is implicated in, while also closely following the case of Basile Bashigwa, the head of intelligence in the city of Goma, who is said to lead a gang of thieves who steal cars in the cities of Goma and Bukavu and allegedly sell them in Uganda.


Another of those who have been in prison for some time, is Ibrahim Makenga, who is also the brother of Gen. Sultani Emmanuel Makenga.This man, who is currently the Deputy Director of the Directorate of Security and Intelligence (DSR) in South Kivu province, was reportedly imprisoned for crimes including corruption and embezzlement.

After his release, he reportedly returned to his duties, unlike Manzi Musonerwa, who was his boss who was arrested and imprisoned on charges of dealing in stolen cars.Manzi, who is the brother-in-law of the North Kivu provincial government, Bahati Musanga Erasto, was immediately sent to command Masisi after his release.


Those involved in the gold trade were also imprisoned


Among the AFC M23 senior soldiers who were imprisoned were those who were allegedly involved in the trade of precious stones, shortly after M23 had taken over the city of Bukavu.


Many of these stones are said to have been looted in the first major city in South Kivu province.


These include the AFC/M23 military spokesman, Lt. Col Willy Ngoma, who was detained for three weeks at the end of July this year on the orders of Gen. Makenga. He was allegedly involved in the illegal trade of gold that was allegedly looted in Bukavu.


Colonel Julien Mahano Barutuje, who is currently the deputy director of M23 intelligence, is said to have been investigated for corruption and dealing in gold with Chinese investors. Although he was able to remain in his position, he was eventually transferred and sent to work in Masisi.


Meanwhile, an officer named François Kazarama is said to be still in prison in Tchanzu for killing a person who lived in his house in the city of Bukavu.


Gen. Makenga continues to be a source of frustration for his aides, while he is often heard criticizing the corruption, theft and embezzlement of funds carried out by the DRC government; some of the reasons he cites as making him choose to take up arms and fight it..

Friday, October 3, 2025

Gen Makenga proves to be a no nonsense leader as WILLY NGOMA AND IBRAHIM MAKENGA, SULTANI'S YOUNGER BROTHER, BRIEFLY ARRESTED FOR GOLD TRAFFICKING AND CORRUPTION

 


On October 1, 2025, several members of the M23 movement were briefly arrested on charges of corruption and gold trafficking. Among them, Willy Ngoma, the group's military spokesperson, was imprisoned for nearly three weeks in late July for his alleged involvement in gold trafficking. Ibrahim Makenga, Sultani Makenga's younger brother, was also detained for several days in early July on suspicion of corruption, before being released and reinstated.


In an effort to strengthen discipline, General Sultani Makenga, the M23's military leader, disciplined certain officers involved in looting and embezzlement in areas controlled by the movement. Several senior officers, including the leader's brother, received short prison sentences. These measures are intended to project an image of integrity, despite accusations of widespread abuse and looting. The crackdown comes as the M23 consolidates its control over vast territories in eastern DRC, rich in precious minerals. According to UN reports, the group has illegally seized and trafficked large quantities of minerals such as tin, tantalum, and tungsten since the capture of Goma.


Other key members are also under investigation or in detention: François Kazarama, still in prison in Tchanzu for the murder of a Congolese citizen; Manzi Musonerwa, head of the DSR in Bukavu, arrested and demoted for alleged trafficking in stolen cars; and Jimmy Nzamuye, former commander in Goma, dismissed from his duties after an arrest for abuse of position.


The M23 movement is attempting to project an image of discipline while being accused of abuse and corruption.