Geopolitics
4 min read
AU Leads Unified Mediation to Revive Eastern DR Congo Peace Talks
ENA English
January 18, 2026•4 days ago

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African and international leaders agreed to unify mediation efforts under an AU-led framework to resolve the conflict in eastern DRC. A high-level summit endorsed a single mediation structure, including an Independent Joint Secretariat, to support the AU Panel of Facilitators. The aim is to resume negotiations, prioritize political dialogue, and implement peace commitments to restore stability in the Great Lakes region.
Addis Ababa, January 18, 2026 (ENA)—African and international leaders have agreed to consolidate all mediation efforts under an African Union (AU)-led framework to address the protracted conflict in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).
The decision followed a high-level, two-day summit in Lomé, chaired by Togo’s President Faure Essozimna Gnassingbé, the AU-mandated mediator for the Great Lakes crisis.
Leaders endorsed a unified mediation structure, including the creation of an Independent Joint Secretariat to support the AU Panel of Facilitators, which includes former presidents from Nigeria, Kenya, Central African Republic, Botswana, and Ethiopia.
The summit called on all parties to implement existing peace commitments, prioritize political dialogue over military action, and resume negotiations under the Doha process with the Congolese government and the M23 armed group.
Leaders also welcomed prior diplomatic efforts, including U.S.-brokered agreements between DRC and Rwanda and the Doha Declaration and Framework Agreement, while highlighting the Paris Conference on the Great Lakes as a milestone in mobilizing international support.
In a statement on X, Gnassingbé emphasized that only a coordinated, durable political solution can restore peace, security, and stability for the Great Lakes region.
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