GOMA, Democratic Republic of Congo (Reuters) - Armed rebels killed at least one soldier during an attack on a house owned by Congo President Joseph Kabila in the restive east where a number of conflicts have flared in recent months, rebel and Congo military sources said on Thursday.
Kabila was not present when Mai-Mai militiamen attacked the house near the town of Beni and clashed with state soldiers, who were able to fend off the attack.
The second assault on a presidential residence in three months points to a deteriorating security situation in Congo stoked in part by Kabila's refusal to step down in 2016 when his mandate expired.
A home belonging to Kabila was attacked and set on fire in North Kivu province in December. A policeman died in the incident.
The security situation in the east, already a tinderbox of ethnic tensions, has worsened this year as state authority slips, forcing tens of thousands to flee and threatening to destabilise the whole country.
A spokesman for the Mai-Mai rebel group said it killed three soldiers during the attack. An army spokesman said one of its soldiers and one assailant were killed.
A spokesman for the president was not available for comment.
The Mai-Mai comprise a number of armed bands that originally formed to resist Rwandan invasions in the 1990s. They have since morphed into a wide variety of ethnic-based militia, smuggling networks and protection rackets.
(Reporting By Fiston Mahamba; Writing by Edward McAllister; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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