Congo rivals agree ceasefire
               Kofi Annan (front far right): Urged peace in Africa 
               African heads of state supporting both sides in the              conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo have              agreed to an immediate cessation of hostilities. 
               United Nations officials said the leaders of Congo,              Zimbabwe, Rwanda and Uganda had agreed to sign a              ceasefire before the middle of December if that were              possible. 
               The breakthrough came after UN Secretary-General Kofi              Annan chaired a head-to-head meeting between the              leaders - the first since the rebellion began in Congo last              August. 
               The Congolese rebels - whom Uganda and Rwanda have              been supporting - did not take part in the Paris talks. 
                             The talks came at the end of the                            two-day Franco-African summit which                            was dominated by continuing fears                            that the fighting which already involves                            more than half a dozen countries                            could turn into a catastrophic regional              war. 
                                   Congo's President Laurent                                  Kabila had earlier been                                  involved in verbal clashes                                  with some leaders during the                                  50-nation summit. 
                                   Zimbabwe's President Robert                                  Mugabe has provided military                                  support to President Kabila's                                  government. 
                                   Rwanda's President                                  Bizimungu and Uganda's                                  Yoweri Museveni have              backed rebels who seized control of part of eastern              Congo after fighting started in August. 
               Burkina Faso's President Blaise Compaore, currently              chairman of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), is              reported to have joined Mr Annan at the round-table              between the leaders. 
               France's President and summit host Jacques Chirac is              due to meet Mr Kabila later on Saturday. 
               Rebels in Paris 
               Earlier, a delegation representing the rebel forces in              Congo arrived in Paris. They were distanced from the              summit as the key sides in the conflict traded insults              during Friday. 
               Reports say the atmosphere grew so tense and the              language so abusive that the Egyptian President Hosni              Mubarak intervened, appealing for calm. 
               Mr Chirac's spokeswoman Catherine Colonna said he              had urged the Central African states involved in the              conflict to "make a gesture to end the impasse". 
               Annan appeal 
               During Friday's meetings, Mr Annan made an              impassioned plea to fellow Africans to end wars, saying              a minority of irresponsible leaders were discrediting the              entire continent. 
               "Conflict in Africa is caused by human action and it can              be ended by human action," Mr Annan told the summit. 
               "Too many leaders, still convinced that might is right, are              seeking to resolve differences not by the force of reason              but by the power of the gun." 
               "In this war, we may well face our greatest challenge. 
               "In the Congo as everywhere, what is needed is for all              parties irrevocably to choose peace and compromise,              turning their backs on violence and conflicts," he said.  |