The Democratic Republic of Congo has filed a case against Rwanda at the International Court of Justice, accusing Kigali of backing armed groups in the eastern Congo. Sources confirm that the filing, submitted late Wednesday, alleges violations of sovereignty and humanitarian law. The move escalates a simmering conflict that has displaced tens of thousands in the Great Lakes region.
Britain, for its part, has issued a statement backing the ICJ process. But don't mistake that for moral clarity. The UK has its own interests in the region, from mining contracts to asylum deals.
The court will now decide whether to issue provisional measures. That decision could come within weeks. But the real story lies in the documents the DRC has submitted: intercepted communications, financial records, and witness testimony that allegedly link Rwanda's military to the M23 rebel group.
I've seen similar evidence in past cases. It's rarely enough to convict a state. But it can be enough to shift the narrative.
And in the Great Lakes, narrative is currency.











