Since the early 1990s, the North Kivu province of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo has been a hotbed of ethnic violence and
human rights violations partially because the area is located adjacent to
Rwanda and
Uganda. The porous borders and intersecting ethnic groups have led to heavy fighting between rival militias and the
Congolese army. Much of the fighting has been over the access to
mineral deposits which are plentiful in the region and the
Kivu conflict has led to the deaths of thousands of people and the displacement of millions more. The
United Nations has maintained an international presence in the region under the banner of
MONUSCO since 1999, deploying peacekeepers and sending
humanitarian aid. In 2013, the rebel group
Mouvement du 23 Mars (M23) surrendered to the government. This surrender, however, did little to ease the fighting and armed groups splintered even further. There are reported to be 70 armed groups operating in the region. One of the major groups continuing to perpetrate violence in the region has been the
Allied Democratic Forces, an
Islamist group with Ugandan origins, which in the last decade has transformed from a low level insurgent group to one of the most powerful factions in
Kivu. The ADF has been accused by Ugandan and U.N. officials of having links to foreign
terrorist groups such as
Al-Shabaab; however, these links are widely considered dubious due to a lack of strong evidence. In 2016, the ADF were suspected to have been behind the
Beni massacre, infiltrating the city of
Beni in North Kivu during the night of 14 August and killing 64–101 people, many of them by hacking. In October 2017, the ADF was blamed for an attack on a U.N. base that killed two
Tanzanian peacekeepers and wounded twelve others in Beni. The same month, ADF fighters killed 22 people, many of them state officials, in the
Beni region, when they ambushed a convoy of motorcycles with machetes and guns. ==Attack==