Three officials told Reuters this Sunday.
The airport had not officially been closed, the sources said, but passengers who were already on site were being urged to return home, while the United Nations (UN) today told staff not to go to the airport and to shelter in place.
Rebels said in a statement this Sunday that the airspace over Goma is now closed.
The three-year insurgency by the rebel group M23 has intensified in January with the rebels seizing control of more of the central African country's territory than ever before, and the UN warning the violence could spill into a wider regional war.
The UN Security Council will meet this Sunday to discuss the crisis, a day earlier than planned, according to diplomats.
Malawi and Uruguay said four of their troops, who were members of the UN peacekeeping mission MONUSCO, were killed in clashes, bringing the death toll among UN peacekeepers to six.
The UN in Malawi said in a post on X on Saturday evening that three Malawian soldiers with the mission in DRC were killed, without giving any further details.
Uruguay's army announced the death of one of its troops in a statement on Saturday, adding that two others had been injured.
Earlier on Saturday, South Africa said that nine of its citizens had been killed in the fighting, including two from the UN's mission in DRC, MONUSCO, and seven from a separate, southern African mission.
MONUSCO did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
DRC, the UN and others accuse neighbouring Rwanda of fuelling the conflict with its own troops and weapons. Rwanda denies this, but Congo's army said on Saturday that Rwandan snipers were responsible for the killing of North Kivu's military Governor on the front line on Friday.
--Reuters--