World | Rwanda Rwanda, Congo OK Border Army to Hunt Rebels African nations set differences aside at summit By Neal Colgrass Posted Jul 15, 2012 3:56 PM CDT Copied United Nations peacekeepers from Uruguay patrol a street in Goma, eastern Congo, Friday, July 13, 2012. (AP Photo/Marc Hofer) Presidents of Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo mended fences today by agreeing on an international force to hunt down rebels in the Congo's chaotic borderlands, Reuters reports. Rwanda's Paul Kagame and the Congo's Joseph Kabila signed the surprising agreement at an African Union summit in Ethiopia. "There was no fighting," joked Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni with reporters. Tensions increased between Rwanda and the Congo this month when Tutsi-led Congolese rebels routed government forces and forced thousands of people to flee—and Rwanda was accused of supporting the rebels. Rwanda denied any involvement, despite evidence put forth by UN experts. Tensions in the eastern Congo are rooted in old Tutsi-Hutu political and ethnic conflicts and the Rwandan genocide of 1994. Read These Next Beneath the upcoming White House ballroom: a new, pricey bunker. Trump's Greenland note spurs calls for congressional probe, 25th. In one sense, Trump will indeed get a third term, argues an op-ed. All is not well in the Beckham family. Report an error