City
Epaper

Major ADF base camp seized in eastern DRC: Ugandan military

By IANS | Updated: July 11, 2025 21:54 IST

Kampala, July 11 The Uganda Peoples' Defence Forces (UPDF) announced on Friday that they had seized a major ...

Open in App

Kampala, July 11 The Uganda Peoples' Defence Forces (UPDF) announced on Friday that they had seized a major military base belonging to a senior commander of the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) rebels in the eastern jungles of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

Chris Magezi, military assistant to Chief of Defence Forces Muhoozi Kainerugaba, said on his official X account that the base was taken following air and artillery strikes, Xinhua news agency reported.

"UPDF forces under Operation Shujaa in the eastern DRC have captured Allied Democratic Forces leader Musa Baluku's base camp in Apakwang, Ituri Province," Magezi said.

"After air and artillery strikes last Sunday morning, UPDF troops advanced and captured a huge camp that used to accommodate 1,000 to 1,500 terrorists and their families. This was achieved on Thursday," he added.

The Ugandan military, together with its Congolese counterparts, launched joint operations against the ADF in November 2021, shortly after the rebel group carried out bomb attacks in Kampala, the Ugandan capital.

The ADF, an affiliate of the Islamic State in Central Africa, is a Ugandan rebel group entrenched in the jungles of the eastern DRC. It has been blamed for widespread attacks on villages in the region.

The ADF was formed as a merger of several rebel factions, including the Allied Democratic Movement, the National Army for the Liberation of Uganda (NALU), and militant members of the Tablighi Jamaat movement.

The main figure of the group was Jamil Mukulu, a former Catholic who converted to Islam. The members were largely from central Uganda, in particular Iganga, Masaka, and Kampala, and portrayed themselves as religious crusaders.

Beyond this vaguely stated religious ideology and statements that the government discriminates against Tablighis, the ADF has given few coherent rationales for their insurgency.

The ADF chose western Uganda apparently for three reasons: terrain that is ideal for a rural insurgency, proximity to the DRC, where the rebels could set up bases and recruit fighters, and the presence of some Ugandan ethnic groups unfriendly to the government that could offer assistance.

It received support from the government of Sudan, which was engaged in disputes with the government of Uganda.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentKBC: Amitabh Bachchan motivates Shafali Verma, says 'jiska zero hota hai, baadme jaake hero hota hai'

International"Good news about cooperation": Roscosmos chief signals India-Russia space partnership

CricketVirat Kohli hits 90-ball hundred in second ODI against South Africa

CricketMaharashtra government announces Rs 11 lakh cash reward for Indian women's cricket team support staff

LifestyleKashika Kapoor Radiates Old-Hollywood Glamour in a Dazzling Hand-Embroidered Gown

International Realted Stories

International"Dawn of a new era," says von der Leyen as EU moves toward full energy independence from Russia

InternationalShehbaz's concessions to Pakistan Army anger brother Nawaz Sharif, triggering major political rift in PML-N

InternationalTalks "constructive," yet "no compromise" reached in Russia-US push for Ukraine peace

InternationalPrimary teachers in B'desh begin complete shutdown of schools over unmet demands

InternationalOne dead, two injured after east Australian shooting