March 14 (Reuters) - Rwanda has signalled that it could withdraw its troops from Mozambique's Cabo Delgado province, where they are helping to counter deadly insurgent attacks, if the mission was no ...
Dialogue sits at the top of many analysts’ lists, but its prospects remain deeply uncertain. Nhamirre argues that dialogue is ...
Rwanda has indicated its readiness to withdraw troops from Mozambique's Cabo Delgado due to insufficient international ...
Rwanda may withdraw its troops from Mozambique's Cabo Delgado if external funding ceases. Deployed since 2021 to quell an ...
Rwanda warns it could withdraw troops from Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado if foreign partners fail to guarantee long-term funding.
Rwanda signaled that it could withdraw its troops from northern Mozambique, where they’ve played a central role in securing ...
In July 2021, Rwanda announced the deployment of troops to Mozambique's northern province of Cabo Delgado, located on the coast of the Indian Ocean. The deployment of military and police officers was ...
Rwanda wants guaranteed funding for its 1,000 troops, whose withdrawal could leave TotalEnergies gas project exposed.
Rwanda's foreign minister says the country's government will withdraw its counterinsurgency troops from Mozambique if the mission's foreign backers don't maintain sustainable funding.
Mozambique’s military is under scrutiny after troops reportedly opened fire on fishermen in the country’s conflict-hit north, ...
Rwanda says it will withdraw Mozambique troops without sustained funding Kigali says mission costs far exceed current EU support Rwandan forces deployed since 2021 against Cabo Delgado insurgency ...
Rwanda has indicated that it may withdraw its troops from the?Mozambique province of Cabo Delgado, where they?help to counter deadly insurgents ...