August 6 - Fighting spread across DRC and on borders with Rwanda, Uganda and Tanzania. Rwanda continued to deny involvement with the rebels and a summit was held in Zimbabwe discussing the conflict.[1]
August 8 - The talks failed to secure a truce of a ceasefire between the countries at the summit in Zimbabwe.[2]
August 10 - Military experts from Namibia, Zimbabwe, Zambia and Tanzania were due in Kinshasa later that week to investigate allegations of Rwandan and Ugandan troops being sent across the border.[3]
August 21 - South African President Nelson Mandela called for a summit over the Congo conflict on Saturday, inviting the leaders of DRC, Rwanda, Uganda and Zimbabwe to come.[4]
August 27 - After over two hundred civilians were reported to be killed by DRC rebels, Zimbabwe criticized countries that had been secretly aiding the rebels, who called for a ceasefire.[5]
December 4 - Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe defended fighting for DRC, referred to the foreign involvement in Bosnian War.[7]
December 5 - The rebel leader said that Angolan and Zimbabwean troops had launched a counter-offensive against his troops in the northwest of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.[8]