The agreement between AFC/M23 and Kinshasa to exchange prisoners following talks in Montreux, Switzerland deserves a cautious welcome. It is a notable gesture, and it comes after a string of peace efforts — including the Nairobi, Luanda, and Doha tracks — that raised hopes but yielded almost nothing.
What matters now is resisting the temptation to oversell this development.
A prisoner exchange, while important, should not be mistaken for peace. At best, it is a confidence-building measure — a small but meaningful signal that the parties may still be capable of choosing dialogue over escalation. That is why it should be treated neither with cynicism nor with celebration, but with sober hope.
The tragedy of eastern DR Congo has endured for far too long, fed by mistrust, hardline positions and repeated diplomatic disappointments. That history explains why every new round of talks is met with both expectation and fatigue. Many in the region have heard promises before. They have seen handshakes before. They have also seen those moments dissolve into renewed confrontation.
That is precisely why this latest step must lead somewhere more substantial.
The exchange of prisoners should open the door to broader confidence-building actions: a sustained ceasefire, humanitarian access, honest political engagement and, above all, a willingness by both parties, especially the Kinshasa regime, to recognize that there is no military glory in a conflict that continues to destroy lives, uproot families and deepen regional instability.
There is, after all, no winner in war. Not in a conflict such as this one.
When guns speak, civilians pay the price. Communities are shattered, economies are crippled and bitterness becomes harder to reverse. Even where one side may claim battlefield gains, the wider region loses. Peace delayed is suffering prolonged.
That is why the real test of the Swiss talks is not whether prisoners are exchanged within days. The real test is whether this step begins to restore enough trust for the parties to move toward durable solutions. If it ends at symbolism, it will simply join the long list of missed opportunities. If it helps rebuild confidence, however gradually, then it may yet prove worthwhile.
For now, cautious optimism is the only responsible response. The region has every reason to hope — but even more reason to insist that this must be the beginning of something bigger than a swap of detainees. What is needed is not a public relations victory, but a genuine path away from conflict.