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Suspected Ugandan rebels kill 12 in Congo

By Editor
01 March 2016   |   3:50 am
SUSPECTED Ugandan rebels used machetes to kill at least 12 civilians yesterday in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, authorities and a local human rights group said, the latest in a series of targeted attacks over the last 18 months. Rebels from the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), an Islamist group originally from Uganda that has…

Tuareg rebels

SUSPECTED Ugandan rebels used machetes to kill at least 12 civilians yesterday in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, authorities and a local human rights group said, the latest in a series of targeted attacks over the last 18 months.

Rebels from the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), an Islamist group originally from Uganda that has operated in the border region since the 1990s, carried out the killings in the village of Mamabio, 50 km (30 miles) north of the commercial center of Beni, said territorial administrator Amisi Kalonda.

“The bodies were found lying in different places. (The rebels) also ransacked the health center,” said Kalonda, who noted that 13 people were killed.

The Centre of Study for the Promotion of Peace, Democracy and Human Rights, a local organisation that documents violence in the region, confirmed the killings in a statement, saying 12 were killed.

Hundreds of civilians have been killed in dozens of raids near Beni since October 2014, defying repeated offensives by Congolese and United Nations peacekeepers against the ADF, who are believed to have only several hundred fighters.

A UN panel of experts and independent analysts, however, have questioned the DRC government’s near blanket attribution of responsibility to the ADF, saying that other armed groups are likely involved.

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