Eight explosive-laden drones targeted the airport serving the northeastern Congolese city of Kisangani over the ‍weekend, local authorities said, blaming the AFC/M23 rebel group and ​neighbouring Rwanda.

If confirmed to be an AFC/M23 ‌operation, it would be the furthest west ​the group has struck as part of its offensive against the government in Kinshasa.

AFC/M23 spokesperson Willy Ngoma said he had “no comment” on the claim from Congolese authorities. A government spokesperson for Rwanda, which United Nations experts and Western powers say backs AFC/M23, did not ​immediately respond to a request for comment.

The government of ⁠Tshopo province, where Kisangani is located, said in a statement on Sunday (February 1, 2026) that the drones attempted to strike Bangoka International Airport between ​early Saturday (January 31, 2026) and early Sunday (February 1, 2026) ⁠but were shot down before reaching their target.

The statement described the aircraft as “kamikaze drones” carrying “non-conventional munitions made up of several sub-munitions.” No casualties or damage were ‌reported. Bangoka airport lies about 17 km from central ‌Kisangani, hundreds of kilometres from the front lines in North and South Kivu provinces, where ‍AFC/M23 has seized large swathes of territory since 2022, capturing the key cities of Goma and Bukavu in a ‍lightning offensive last year.