Scores of angry residents took to the streets of Goma in protest following several days of violence that have left at least seven dead in this city of nearly a million people near the Congo-Rwanda border.
"We are using artillery, indirect fire with mortars and our aviation, and at the moment we have troops in the front line alongside the FARDC (government forces)," the UN force commander in Congo, Gen Dos Santos Cruz, said.
There has been widespread skepticism in Congo that the intervention brigade will be a game-changing addition to the existing UN force, which stood by when M23 fighters briefly captured Goma late last year.
Congo's information minister immediately blamed today's rocket attack that killed three people in Goma on neighbouring Rwanda, which has long been accused of supporting the eastern Congolese rebel movement known as M23.
However, the UN force commander told journalists he had no doubt the rockets were fired from M23 rebel positions. Rwanda, which has vigorously denied allegations by the United Nations and others that it has provided support to the M23 rebels fighting the Congolese government, also accused Congolese forces of attacking Rwanda. The Rwandan army said mortar fire landed in several villages along the border on yesterday.
Brig Joseph Nzabamwita, a spokesman for Rwanda's military, said "acts of provocation that endanger the lives of Rwandan citizens will not remain unanswered indefinitely."
