A week earlier, ADF terrorists attacked a cargo truck that was carrying onions, resulting in the death of a civilian and the burning of the vehicle.
On Saturday, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni announced that the country's military helicopters launched an attack on a camp of the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) rebels, located 60 km from the border between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).
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"The attack was devastating because it was a clear target, and the reconnaissance plane was monitoring from the air," Museveni said in a statement posted on X.
According to official data, this air raid occurred less than a week after suspected ADF rebels attacked a safari vehicle, resulting in the deaths of two tourists and their guide in a national park area in western Uganda.
A week earlier, ADF terrorists also attacked a cargo truck transporting onions, killing one civilian and set ablaze the vehicle.
#PRESSRELEASE |
— Uganda Police Force (@PoliceUg) October 23, 2023
CONTINUOUS OPERATIONS AGAINST ADF TERRORISTS
Our Joint Counter Terrorism Task Force, continues to monitor all spaces, in villages, urban centres and towns, where ADF elements and remnants are trying to hide within the community. Their failure to surrender or… pic.twitter.com/VRF42kA1G2
"The group of five people responsible for burning the truck, the tourist van, and killing the two tourists with their driver is being pursued," Museveni said.
Furthermore, in a previous statement, Museveni warned that ADF rebels might attempt to infiltrate the border to enter Uganda due to the mounting pressure they were facing from the joint forces of Ugandan and DRC soldiers.
Official data shows that Ugandan troops, in collaboration with their DRC counterparts, have been jointly combating the rebel group since 2022.
The ADF, also a branch of the Islamic State in Central Africa, is held responsible for causing chaos and launching attacks in North Kivu and Ituri provinces in eastern DRC.