The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and the M23 rebel group have signed a new framework agreement in Doha, Qatar, marking what mediators describe as a historic step toward peace in the country’s war-torn east. The deal, finalized on Saturday, comes after months of negotiations led by Qatar, the United States, and the African Union, and aims to end years of devastating conflict in the mineral-rich provinces of North and South Kivu.
Background of the Conflict
Since late 2021, the Rwanda-backed M23 has waged a renewed insurgency, capturing swathes of territory and displacing millions. In January 2025, the group seized Goma, eastern Congo’s largest city, and later advanced into Bukavu, triggering a humanitarian crisis that left thousands dead. The offensive underscored the fragility of earlier ceasefire deals and intensified accusations of Rwandan support for the rebels—a claim Kigali has consistently denied.
The Doha Agreement
The newly signed Doha Framework for a Comprehensive Peace Agreement builds on earlier accords, including a July ceasefire deal in Qatar and a June bilateral peace agreement between Kinshasa and Kigali signed in Washington. While previous agreements faltered amid violations, this latest framework is designed to establish monitoring mechanisms for a ceasefire and lay the groundwork for political dialogue and reintegration of rebel forces.
At the ceremony, Qatar’s chief negotiator Mohammed Al-Khulaifi hailed the accord as “historic,” emphasizing that mediators would continue efforts to translate the agreement into tangible peace on the ground. Representatives from the U.S. and African Union attended the signing, underscoring the international community’s stake in stabilizing the DRC.
Humanitarian Stakes
The conflict has displaced nearly six million people internally and forced over a million Congolese to flee to neighboring countries. Aid agencies warn that without swift implementation of the agreement, the humanitarian crisis could deepen further. The mineral-rich east, home to cobalt and coltan reserves vital to global technology supply chains, has long been destabilized by armed groups competing for control.
Looking Ahead
While optimism surrounds the Doha signing, analysts caution that trust-building between Kinshasa and M23 remains fragile. Past agreements have collapsed under accusations of ceasefire violations, and the challenge now lies in ensuring compliance and accountability. The involvement of Qatar, Washington, and the African Union provides diplomatic weight, but the success of the deal will depend on whether both sides honor commitments and whether Rwanda’s alleged role is addressed transparently.
For the DRC, the framework agreement represents a rare moment of hope in a conflict that has spanned decades. For the international community, it is a reminder that peace in Congo is not only a regional imperative but a global one, tied to humanitarian stability and critical supply chains.



