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'We have to rebuild a city,' Argentine official says after storm kills 10

By - Mar 08,2025 - Last updated at Mar 08,2025

An elderly man is helped to evacuate a flooded area after a powerful storm struck the city of Bahia Blanca, 600 km south of Buenos Aires yesterday (AFP photo)

BUENOS AIRES — "We have to rebuild a city," a top official of Buenos Aires province said Saturday, after torrential rains and flooding claimed at least 10 lives in the city of Bahia Blanca, south of the capital.

 

More than 1,000 people evacuated homes in the area, officials said.

 

Local media said two sisters, aged four and one, remained missing.

 

"The national and provincial governments are collaborating to deal with the storm," Buenos Aires government minister Carlos Bianco told local radio station Futurock. 

 

"Basically, we have to rebuild a city. There are people who lost everything."

 

The Bahia Blanca mayor's office put the number of dead at 10, adding that at least five people died in flooded roadways.

 

The death toll in the city of 350,000 could still rise, the office said. 

 

It put the number of evacuees at 1,128 as of early Saturday. 

 

The downpour, which began Friday morning, was "unprecedented," dumping more than 15 inches (400 millimeters) of rain in the area in just eight hours, according to the province's security minister, Javier Alonso.

 

Desolation 

 

Local media showed images of flooded shops and reported overnight looting.

 

The government has authorized emergency reconstruction aid of 10 billion pesos ($9.2 million at the official exchange rate). 

 

The storm left much of the surrounding coastal area without power, though the local electric utility had restored service to some 30,000 users by Saturday morning. 

 

Bahia Blanca has suffered past weather-related disasters, including a storm in December 2023 that claimed 13 lives. 

 

In the resort town of Mar del Plata, south of Bahia Blanca, officials suspended evening activities Friday and urged people to remain indoors.

 

The city of Buenos Aires was also hit by the storm but suffered no major damage.

 

Ailing pope showing 'good response to treatment' - Vatican

By - Mar 08,2025 - Last updated at Mar 08,2025

A woman prays at the statue of John Paul II outside the Gemelli University Hospital where Pope Francis is hospitalized with pneumonia, in Rome on March 8, 2025 (AFP photo)

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis, in hospital with pneumonia, is responding well to treatment, the Vatican said on Saturday, adding that the 88-year-old's condition had seen "a gradual, slight improvement".

The Argentine pontiff has been in Rome's Gemelli hospital since February 14, and has suffered several respiratory crises since his admission, but for several days now his condition has been described "stable".

"The Holy Father's clinical condition in recent days has remained stable and, consequently, testifies to a good response to treatment. There is therefore a gradual, slight improvement", the Vatican said.

Though Francis does not have a fever and is "stable", his doctors want the same positive results "in the coming days" before giving a prognosis, the Holy See said in the evening bulletin.

The pope prayed Saturday morning in the chapel belonging to the special papal suite on the hospital's 10th floor, while in the afternoon he alternated rest with work, it said.

The pope has suffered a series of health issues in recent years, from colon surgery in 2021 to a hernia operation in 2023, but this is the longest and most serious hospitalisation of his papacy.

The Holy See had on Thursday evening reported the pontiff's condition was "stable" for the third day in a row, with no repeat of the respiratory crises that have punctuated his time at Rome's Gemelli hospital.

It then released an audio recording made earlier in the day in which Francis, breathless, thanked those who have been praying for his recovery.

"I thank you from the bottom of my heart for your prayers for my health from the Square, I accompany you from here," the Argentine said in a message broadcast in St Peter's Square.

"May God bless you and the Virgin protect you. Thank you," he said, taking laboured breaths as he spoke in his native Spanish.

It was the first time the world has heard Francis's voice since he was admitted to the Gemelli hospital, which has a special suite for popes on the 10th floor, on February 14.

 

 'Good sign' 

 

Pilgrims have been gathering in St Peter's Square at the Vatican every evening to pray for the pope's recovery, and hundreds of people there on Thursday applauded when they heard his message.

"We were very happy that he could speak," said John Maloney, a 76-year-old English pilgrim.

"It's a good sign that he's actually able to speak," he told AFP, adding: "He's got a long way to go so he's in the hands of God."

But for Claudia Bianchi, a 50-year-old Italian from Rome, "It struck me to hear him so tired".

"It was a positive sign, so it gives us hope that he still has the strength to speak. And he always seems to want to be with us," added another Rome local, Alessandra Dalboni, 53.

The Vatican said earlier Thursday that Francis, head of the worldwide Catholic Church since 2013, is in a "stable" condition with no repeat of Monday's respiratory failure..

Francis continued with his breathing exercises and physiotherapy, did not have a fever, and managed to do a bit of work in both the morning and afternoon, it said.

The Vatican has been providing twice daily updates on the pope's health, a morning one on how the night went, and an evening medical bulletin.

But on Thursday it said that "in view of the stability of the clinical picture, the next medical bulletin will be released on Saturday".

Nonetheless, "the doctors are still maintaining a reserved prognosis", it said, meaning they will not say how they expect his condition to evolve.

 

Russia claims advances in Kursk as Zelensky says 'committed' to talks

By - Mar 08,2025 - Last updated at Mar 08,2025

A woman stands by a windowless window in her destroyed residential building following a strike in Dobropillia, Donetsk region, on March 8, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine (AFP photo)

KYIV, Ukraine — Russia on Saturday said its troops had retaken three villages seized by Ukraine in its Kursk border region in a fresh setback for Kyiv as the prospect of peace talks draws closer.

 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Saturday named a high-level delegation including ministers that will meet US negotiators in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday seeking to repair ties with President Donald Trump's administration.

 

The United States has said it wants to discuss a "framework for a peace agreement", but the Ukrainian leader was less specific.

 

"We hope to discuss and agree on the necessary decisions and steps", he said, stressing that Ukraine is "fully committed to constructive dialogue".

 

The three-year-long war is now at a critical juncture for Kyiv after Trump suspended US military aid as well as access to satellite imagery and intelligence-sharing following his public falling-out with Zelensky last week.

 

Ukraine still controls some 400 square kilometres in the Kursk region after launching a cross-border offensive last August and Zelensky sees this as a possible bargaining chip in peace talks.

 

But Ukraine's troops in Kursk have seen their position worsen in recent weeks with Russia's army encroaching.

 

Russia's defence ministry on Saturday announced the recapture of three more villages: Viktorovka, Nikolayevka and Staraya Sorochina.

 

According to DeepState, an online military tracker linked to the Ukrainian army, the Russian move followed a "breach" in the Ukrainian defence lines near the town of Sudzha, which is under Kyiv's control.

 

The advance appears to have cut off the logistics route needed by Ukraine to supply its troops in the town, although Kyiv has not confirmed this.

 

Russia has already taken back more than two-thirds of its territory in Kursk initially seized by Ukraine.

 

The Ukrainian military General Staff said Saturday that 14 clashes were ongoing in the region amid heavy bombardment.

 

"Since the beginning of the day, the enemy has carried out 23 air strikes, dropped a total of 33 guided aerial bombs on our troops' positions and populated areas, and conducted 362 artillery attacks," it said.

 

Small groups of Russian troops have also mounted attacks in recent weeks into Ukraine's Sumy region bordering Kursk.

 

Ukraine's Centre for Countering Disinformation on Saturday denied reports of a "massive breakthrough", saying small groups were trying to cross but being destroyed.

 

Meeting in Saudi Arabia 

 

Peace negotiations remain a distant prospect with Kyiv and Moscow making starkly opposed demands. But Trump's return to the White House has brought this prospect nearer.

 

The American president has radically shifted the US position, reaching out to Russian President Vladimir Putin while criticising Zelensky.

 

Senior US and Ukrainian officials are set to meet for talks on the war in Jeddah on Tuesday. Zelensky will also visit on Monday for talks with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

 

US envoy Steve Witkoff said he would speak to the Ukrainian negotiators about an "initial ceasefire" with Russia and a "framework" for a longer agreement.

 

Zelensky said Ukraine would be represented by Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiga and Defence Minister Rustem Umerov as well as the president's chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, and the deputy chief of staff Pavlo Palisa, a respected military commander. 

 

Trump says he wants to end the war as soon as possible, but Ukraine fears being forced to make heavy territorial concessions to Moscow.

 

Trump on Friday threatened new sanctions and tariffs on Russia over its bombardment of Ukraine.

 

Zelensky called for allies to "increase sanctions against Russia" after heavy overnight bombardment in the east and northeast.

 

A Russian assault hit the centre of Dobropillia in the eastern Donetsk region late on Friday, killing 11 people and wounding 40, according to the emergency services. 

 

Separately, three people were killed and seven others wounded in a drone attack in the town of Bogodukhiv, the military head of the eastern Kharkiv region, Oleg Synegubov, said.

 

'More bombs' 

 

The latest strikes came after EU leaders, shaken by the prospect of US disengagement, agreed to boost the bloc's defences.

 

Putin "has no interest in peace", the European Union's foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said Saturday, adding that "we must step up our military support".

 

Zelensky said Saturday that Ukrainian and British diplomats had held "highly productive" talks in Kyiv, without giving details.

 

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk described the latest Russian attacks as "what happens when someone appeases barbarians", saying this results in "more bombs, more aggression".

 

In Dobropillia, AFP saw charred residential buildings, flattened market stalls and evidence of cluster bomb damage.

 

Irina Kostenko, 59, spent the night cowering in her hallway with her husband. When she left the apartment building on Saturday, she saw a neighbour "lying dead on the ground, covered with a blanket".

 

"It was shocking, I don't have the words to describe it," Kostenko told AFP.

Rain checks spread of Japan wildfire

By - Mar 06,2025 - Last updated at Mar 06,2025

TOKYO — Rain appears to have halted the spread of Japan's worst wildfire in more than half a century, officials said Thursday, as residents expressed relief the smoke was gone.

The blaze had raged around the northern city of Ofunatofor more than a week, killing one person and forcing more than 4,500 residents to evacuate their homes.

The rain, which began falling Wednesday following a record dry period, had helped firefighting efforts, a local fire official said.

"Thanks in part to the rain, the situation has subsided to an extent," Ofunato Mayor Kiyoshi Fuchigami told a regular briefing. 

"We realise many residents are aching to return home," he said, adding that evacuation orders would be lifted when safety was confirmed.

Several columns of white smoke and fire sources persisted during the day, officials said. 

"The fires haven't been fully put out yet," another Ofunato official told the briefing. 

Residents were more positive, however. 

"I'm relieved to see no smoke", one elderly woman told public broadcaster NHK, while a man said he was "very happy that we had rain yesterday".

The wildfire burnt about 2,900 hectares, around half the size of Manhattan, making it Japan's largest in more than 50 years, surpassing the 2,700 hectares engulfed by a 1975 fire on Hokkaido island.

Japan endured its hottest summer on record last year as climate change pushes up temperatures worldwide.

Then in February, Ofunato received just 2.5 millimetres, of rainfall, breaking the previous record low for the month of 4.4 millimetres in 1967 and well below the average of 41 millimetres.

At least 78 buildings are believed to have been damaged, although details are still being assessed, according to the fire agency.

The number of wildfires in Japan has declined since a 1970s peak.

However, there were about 1,300 in 2023, concentrated in the period from February to April when the air dries out and winds pick up.

Greg Mullins, a former fire and rescue commissioner for the Australian state of New South Wales, told AFP this fire as well as the recent ones in Los Angeles were "highly unusual" because they took place in the cooler winter months.

"In both cases the fires were preceded by hot summers, which increased evaporation and drying of vegetation, followed by large rainfall deficits that parched the landscape," he said.

"This is a common by-product of climate change," said Mullins, a founder of the Emergency Leaders for Climate Action group.

S. Korea fighter jets accidentally drop bombs, civilians among 15 injured

By - Mar 06,2025 - Last updated at Mar 06,2025

South Korean soldiers and rescue workers inspect a damaged house after a bomb accident at a village in Pocheon today (AFP photo)

SEOUL — Two South Korean Air Force fighter jets accidentally dropped eight bombs on a village during a joint training exercise with US forces on Thursday, officials said, with civilians among 15 people injured. 

The Air Force KF-16 jets were participating in joint US-South Korea live-fire training exercises in Pocheon, about 25 kilometres south of the heavily fortified border with nuclear-armed North Korea, military and government officials said.

The two jets accidentally released eight MK-82 general-purpose bombs, four each, which landed "outside the designated firing range", the Air Force said.

"The pilot appears to have entered incorrect coordinates during the pre-flight preparation process," an Air Force official told reporters.

One Pocheon resident told Yonhap news agency he was watching television when he heard the bombs explode.

"I suddenly heard an enormous explosion, like a thunderclap, and the whole house shook," said the resident, who gave only his surname Park.

"When I went outside, everything was in chaos," he said.

The two aircraft were meant to fire simultaneously at a target as part of the exercise, the Air Force official said.

"It is believed that the first pilot entered incorrect coordinates, leading the second aircraft to drop its munitions as well."

A defence ministry official said an investigation was underway.

"We deeply regret the unintended release of the bombs, which resulted in civilian casualties, and wish those, injured a swift recovery," the Air Force said in an earlier statement.

It said it would "take all necessary measures, including compensation for damages".

South Korea's National Fire Agency said the bombs had "fallen on a village during a South Korea-US joint exercise".

That resulted in "casualties and property damage, with many displaced residents", it said.

Fifteen people were injured, including civilians and military personnel, the agency said. 

One church building and sections of two houses were damaged, according to an agency statement.

EU seeks unity on Ukraine and defence boost as Trump pivots from allies

By - Mar 06,2025 - Last updated at Mar 06,2025

European Council President Antonio Costa (L) and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen (R) greet Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky as he arrives at the Special European Council to discuss continued support for Ukraine and European defence at the EU headquarters in Brussels today (AFP photo)

BRUSSELS — EU leaders gather with VolodymyrZelensky Thursday in Brussels in search of unity on bolstering Ukraine and Europe's defences after Donald Trump upended traditional US alliances and retracted wartime backing of Kyiv.

Thursday's summit brings all 27 EU leaders together for the first time since last week's explosive meeting between presidents Trump and Zelensky, with Washington since suspending military aid and intelligence sharing to help Kyiv fight off Russia's invasion.

This has sent Ukraine's allies scrambling, with EU leaders openly questioning Washington's reliability as a security partner going forward.

While the Brussels meeting will aim to cement European support for Kyiv, it is unlikely to yield any major announcements of aid beyond the 30 billion euros the bloc has already committed for this year.

The prospect of the United States pivoting from its European partners in NATO has fuelled a growing consensus on the summit's other major topic: the need to strengthen Europe's defences against Russia.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen has laid out a plan aimed at mobilising 800 billion euros to "re-arm Europe", largely by freeing states to spend much more, which leaders are expected to greenlight Thursday.

"Europe faces a clear and present danger on a scale that none of us has seen in our adult lifetime," she wrote to leaders, urging Europe to "act as decisively as the situation dictates."

France's President Emmanuel Macron doubled down in a sombre address to the nation on the summit's eve, calling for a defence spending surge to confront a "new era" and saying he would discuss extending France's nuclear deterrent to European partners.

"Who can believe that this Russia of today will stop at Ukraine?" Macron asked. "I want to believe that the United States will stay by our side, but we have to be prepared for that not to be the case."

Germany's chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz, who conferred with EU chiefs in Brussels ahead of the talks, has likewise declared himself ready for "the worst-case scenario" and embraced radical reforms to ramp up Germany defence spending.

Trump warns Gaza 'you are dead' if hostages not freed

By - Mar 06,2025 - Last updated at Mar 06,2025

A woman carrying some personal items walks along a devastated street as she leaves the Nur Shams camp for Palestinian refugees, where Israeli forces allowed residents to retrieve belongings after issuing reported demolition notifications for several houses, in the occupied West Bank yesterday (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump on Wednesday threatened further destruction of Gaza if all remaining hostages are not released, and issued an ultimatum to Hamas leaders to flee.


Strongly backing Israel as a ceasefire teeters, Trump said he was "sending Israel everything it needs to finish the job" as his administration expedites billions of dollars in weapons.

"Release all of the Hostages now, not later, and immediately return all of the dead bodies of the people you murdered, or it is OVER for you," he wrote on his Truth Social platform after meeting freed hostages.

"This is your last warning! For the leadership, now is the time to leave Gaza, while you still have a chance."

Trump also made clear there would be repercussions for Gaza as a whole, where virtually the entire population has been displaced by Israel's relentless military campaign in response to the October 7, 2023 attacks by Hamas.

"To the People of Gaza: A beautiful Future waits, but not if you hold Hostages. If you do, you are DEAD!"

His comments follow Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's warning of "consequences that you cannot imagine" if Hamas does not hand over remaining hostages seized in the October 7 attack.

The first phase of a ceasefire ended over the weekend after six weeks of relative calm that included exchanges of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.

While Israel has said it wants to extend the first phase until mid-April, Hamas has insisted on a transition to the second phase, which should lead to a permanent end to the war.

But Israel has ramped up pressure not just with threats by halting all entry of goods and supplies into Gaza, renewing a hardline approach to which the previous US administration of Joe Biden had objected.

"Hamas has indeed suffered a severe blow, but it has not yet been defeated. The mission is not yet accomplished," Israel's new military chief Eyal Zamir warned Wednesday.

France, Britain and Germany jointly Wednesday called the humanitarian situation in Gaza "catastrophic," and urged Israel to ensure the "unhindered" delivery of aid.

South Africa said Israel's restriction of aid into Gaza since the weekend amounted to using starvation as a weapon of war.

Talks with Hamas 

Trump's hawkish language came after the United States confirmed unprecedented direct talks with Hamas, with the US envoy on hostage affairs, Adam Boehler, discussing American hostages.

"Look, dialogue and talking to people around the world to do what's in the best interest of the American people is something that the President" believes is right, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said.

The United States had refused direct contact with the Palestinian militants since banning them as a terrorist organization in 1997. But Leavitt said that the hostage envoy in his role "has the authority to talk to anyone."

Both the White House and Netanyahu's office confirmed Israel was consulted in advance on the talks.

Five Americans are believed to remain among the hostages. Four of them have been confirmed dead and the other, Edan Alexander, is believed to be alive.

The Hamas assault resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, most of them civilians, while Israel's military retaliation in Gaza has killed at least 48,440 people, also mostly civilians, data from both sides show.

Of the 251 captives taken during Hamas's attack, 58 remain in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military has confirmed are dead.

Daesh militant behind Kabul airport attack arrested -US

By - Mar 05,2025 - Last updated at Mar 05,2025

WASHINGTON — An Islamic State operative who allegedly planned the 2021 suicide bombing outside Kabul airport during the chaotic US military withdrawal has been arrested, President Donald Trump has said.

 

The bomber detonated a device among packed crowds as they tried to flee Afghanistan, killing 170 Afghans and 13 US troops securing the perimeter, days after the Taliban seized control of the capital.

 

In his first address to Congress since returning to the White House, Trump announced on Tuesday that Pakistan had assisted in the arrest of "the top terrorist responsible for that atrocity."

 

The Justice Department named the man as Mohammad Sharifullah, also known as Jafar, and said he is expected to appear in a Virginia court on Wednesday.

 

Sharifullah, who is a leader of the Islamic State Khorasan branch in Afghanistan and Pakistan, has been charged with "providing and conspiring to provide material support and resources to a designated foreign terrorist organization resulting in death."

 

The Justice Department said Wednesday the operative admitted to FBI Special Agents "to helping prepare" for the attack, "including scouting a route near the airport for an attacker."

 

"This evil ISIS-K terrorist orchestrated the brutal murder of 13 heroic Marines," Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement.

 

Sharifullah also admitted to involvement in several other attacks, the Justice Department said, including the March 2024 Moscow Crocus City Hall attack in which he said "he had shared instructions on how to use AK-style rifles and other weapons to would-be attackers."

 

In Tuesday's speech, Trump took a swipe at his predecessor Joe Biden's oversight of the "disastrous and incompetent withdrawal from Afghanistan" and thanked Pakistan "for helping arrest this monster."

 

The United States withdrew its last troops from Afghanistan in August 2021, ending a chaotic evacuation of tens of thousands of Afghans who had rushed to Kabul's airport in the hope of boarding a flight out of the country.

 

Images of crowds storming the airport, climbing atop aircraft -- and some clinging to a departing US military cargo plane as it rolled down the runway -- aired on news bulletins around the world.

 

In April 2023, the White House announced that an Islamic State official involved in plotting the attack at the airport's Abbey Gate had been killed in an operation by Afghanistan's new Taliban government.

 

 'Leverage US concerns' 

 

Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif thanked Trump for "acknowledging and appreciating Pakistan's role and support" in counter-terrorism efforts in Afghanistan.

 

"We will continue to partner closely with the United States in securing regional peace and stability," he wrote on social media platform X.

 

Pakistan's strategic importance has waned since the US and NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan, which has seen violence rebound in the border regions.

 

Tensions between the neighbouring countries have soared, with Islamabad accusing Kabul of failing to root out militants sheltering on Afghan soil who launch attacks on Pakistan.

 

The Taliban government denies the charges and in a statement said the arrest of the ISK operative Sharifullah "is proof" that the group's hideouts are on Pakistani soil.

 

ISK, which has claimed several recent attacks in Afghanistan, has staged a growing number of bloody international assaults, including killing more than 90 in an Iranian bombing last year.

 

Michael Kugelman, South Asia Institute director at The Wilson Centre said on X that Pakistan was trying to "leverage US concerns about terror in Afghanistan and pitch a renewed security partnership."

 

"Pakistan's help catching the Abbey Gate attack plotter should be seen in this context," he added.

 

Families sent back to homes ruined in east DR Congo conflict

By - Mar 05,2025 - Last updated at Mar 05,2025

Members of the Synergie des Wazalendu of the Front Nord and the Volontaires de la Resistance Populaire attend a briefing in the hills above the town of Butembo, North Kivu, in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, on December 19, 2024 (AFP photo)

SAKE, DR CONGO —When the Banyene family were sent back to their home in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, all that had survived the fighting was a crumbling wall and sagging metal roof.

 

Shell casings from automatic weapons littered the plot, leftovers from the conflict between the Congolese army and the Rwanda-backed M23 armed group that had until recently riven their hometown of Sake.

 

The Banyenes, like most of Sake's inhabitants, had found refuge in a displaced persons camp on the outskirts of the city of Goma, around 20 kilometres away in an area blighted by regional wars for decades.

 

But at the end of January, Goma , capital of North Kivu province ,  was seized by the M23 as part of a lightning offensive which has seen the group occupy swathes of territory in the eastern DRC.

 

Then in early February the M23 ordered those displaced by the conflict, including the Banyene family , to return to what remained of their homes.

 

In a matter of days camps where hundreds of thousands of people had been crammed together in dire conditions emptied out.

 

And so Sake, which sits on the Congolese bank of Lake Kivu across from Rwanda, filled up again.

 

"It's better to be at home than in the camps," said Tumani Feresi, one of the family's elder brothers. 

 

But "we had to leave the camp with nothing and we have difficulty eating", he added.

 

 Bombs in fields 

 

Although Sake is coming back to life its fragile wooden houses, scattered among grey volcanic rock, bear the scars of conflict.

 

A flimsy sheet of tarpaulin has been put up to paper over a collapsed section of the wall of the Banyene house.

 

Two tents have hastily sprung up to help house the family's 20 or so members, who range in age from young children to the elderly.

 

Like the vast majority of the town's population the family are farmers, but dare not till their fields yet.

 

"There are bombs that haven't exploded [in the fields]," Patient, one of the family's sons said.

 

He gestured towards the surrounding bush, still stalked by fighters from militias loyal to the DRC who fled the clashes with the M23. 

 

"If a woman goes to the field to get firewood, she will be raped there," said Kivuruga, another Banyene brother.

 

He said that the M23, which according to UN experts is backed by at least 4,000 Rwandan soldiers, has mostly restored security in Sake.

 

Many shops have reopened since mid-February and residents now flock to the town's market where fruit and vegetables grown on the province's fertile hills are sold under tarpaulin sheets.

 

But sometimes the fighters emerge from the hills at night to steal and rob, Kivuruga added.

 

 'No money' 

 

On the road to South Kivu's provincial capital Bukavu, AFP met many villagers who found their houses looted on their return.

 

Near Shasha, a village nestled in the hollow of the mountains on the shores of Lake Kivu, Sarah Kahindo told AFP: "I was happy when I returned home in January."

 

As she worked with a dozen women and girls from the village under a cloudless sky she told AFP she was lucky to have avoided the worst of the violence.

 

"My field was in good condition, but our house had been completely looted," Kahindo added.

 

According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 44 per cent  of people who returned to North and South Kivu "found their fields occupied" by people from other places working in them.

 

More than one in 10 who returned to their homes found them inhabited by interlopers who had moved in in their absence, the OCHA added. 

 

Kahindo said the M23 had made the area safer. 

 

"Since the M23 arrived, there have been no problems with security, we sleep well and we work in our fields without problems," Kahindo said. 

 

But economic recovery is taking time.

 

Banks are still closed in zones controlled by the M23 on the orders of the DRC.

 

The DRC accuses the armed group of being a tool for Rwanda to exploit its neighbour's agricultural lands and vast mineral wealth, though Rwanda denies this.

 

"You can go and sell things, but it's difficult to find a buyer because there's no money about," Kahindo said.

 

At the port of Minova, an important commercial hub for Goma and its surroundings, traders warned that business is slower than usual.

 

Its market was deserted by the early evening, three hours earlier than its normal closing time.

 

Fresh fruit, vegetables and fish still line the market stalls.

 

"But there is no more money for business," said shopkeeper Sylvie, whose home was also destroyed in the fighting.

 

Ailing pope 'rested well' but misses start of Lent

By - Mar 05,2025 - Last updated at Mar 05,2025

Pope Francis leads the vespers at St Peter's basilica in The Vatican, on February 1, 2025 (AFP photo)

VATICAN CITY - Pope Francis, who is in hospital with pneumonia, "rested well" overnight while wearing an oxygen mask, the Vatican said Wednesday, but his absence at the start of the Lent religious season highlighted fears over the health of the 88-year-old.
 
Francis has suffered worrying respiratory attacks since his admission to the Gemelli hospital in Rome on February 14 with breathing difficulties.
 
The pope "rested well overnight", according to a morning medical bulletin released by the Vatican.
 
The Roman Catholic headquarters said on Tuesday that Francis had passed a calm day without an attack. He had no fever, was "alert" and cooperating with his treatment, the Vatican said in its evening medical bulletin.
 
But the Argentine wore an oxygen mask overnight and his prognosis "remains reserved".
 
The head of the Catholic Church will not preside over Ash Wednesday celebrations, which mark the start of Lent, the 40 days preceding Easter when Christ fasted in the desert.
 
The pope usually leads the main service, which will be held at 1600 GMT. In his absence, the mass will be presided over by Italian Cardinal Angelo de Donatis, preceded by a procession on Rome's Aventine Hill.
 
Francis also missed Ash Wednesday celebrations in 2022, that time due to acute knee pain -- one of a series of health woes that have afflicted the pontiff since his election in 2013.
 
His health has regularly led to speculation, particularly among his critics, as to whether he could resign.
 
Francis has not been seen in public for almost three weeks and the last photos of him were from private audiences hours before his admission to hospital.

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