DR Congo death toll nears 50 after second attack
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO (ANS – May 15, 2016)
-- At least a further nine people have been killed in another attack by
suspected Islamist militants in the eastern extremes of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC), bringing the total killed recently to
nearly 50.
World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org)
had previously reported that between 20 and 40 villagers had been
killed in an attack late in the evening on May 3, 2016, in a village in
North Kivu province.
Another
attack late on May 6th, in the province of Ituri, slightly further
north, saw between nine and 15 killed, including the worship leader and
deaconess of a local church. They were part of the mission organization Eglise du Rocher, or Church on the Rock, which also lost a pastor and his wife to an attack in October 2014 in Cadeau.
That
church, and the school attached to it, have yet to reopen. The church
has also since abandoned its mission amongst Mbuti Pygmies.
“We
are heartbroken, questioning our faith, half-terrified, but determined,
and carrying on,” said Mike Anticoli, the founder of Eglise du Rocher.
“We are a small but growing church organization, founded in 2005, and
have 13 churches and three ministry training schools in the danger zone
of North Kivu. We may be targeted due to the fact that we train local
leaders and aspiring missionaries from several churches and
denominations.”
The
deaconess, Éva Makanaiye, 40, leaves behind five children: Eva-Mamulu,
12; Alima-Franchine, 9; Sami-Sumbuka, 7; Unamosi-Jouele, 4; and
Amali-Daniel, 2. The worship leader, identified only by her first name,
Rose, also leaves behind five children.
“Our
pastor ran away with two of his children. The whole night he did not
know where his wife was, or his three other children. People spent the
night in the jungle under heavy rain. This morning our pastor came back
and found his wife and children all alive. Praise God!” Anticoli said.
The
attack on May 6th lasted just 45 minutes, before the attackers fled to
hide in the bush, a local source told World Watch Monitor.
Locals
expressed anger at the failure of nearby armed forces to intervene. The
attack took place just 300 meters away from a Congolese army base and
500 meters from a UN army base. Locals said they had earlier alerted
soldiers about “suspicious movements” nearby.
A
spokesman from the Congolese army said they had not been able to
intervene because the attack took place at night and was over quickly.
Teddy
Kataliko, a representative from the Civil Society of Beni, asked for “a
parliamentary investigation commission to clarify the
responsibilities.”
World
Watch Monitor says that locals are blaming the attack on Muslim Defense
International, formerly known as the Alliance of Democratic Forces, but
the group has not yet claimed responsibility.
“It
is clearly evident that this is a terrorist act to clear Christians out
of a gigantic area of eastern Congo,” said another local source, who
did not wish to be named. “A huge area south of Eringeti was already
abandoned. Now people from a huge area north of Eringeti are fleeing.
These are almost all Christians.”
MDI,
a 20-year-old alliance of Ugandan militants, was first linked with
former Ugandan dictator Idi Amin. It has long been active in the eastern
regions of neighboring DR Congo, and is responsible for the deaths of
hundreds of civilians since 2014, according to the UN.
“MDI
has repeatedly attacked the majority-Christian population in eastern
DRC for years. Kidnapping and murder are common,” said World Watch
Monitor. “It is alleged to have support from the Islamic government of
Sudan, an assertion made by the Uganda government and backed by Western
diplomatic sources. The group is accused of waging a proxy war for Sudan
against Uganda as retribution for Uganda’s support of secessionists who
broke away to form the nation of South Sudan in 2011.
“MDI is known to have attracted foreign recruits and to have forced Christians to convert to Islam.”
The
local population in the related area is overwhelmingly Christian
(95.8%) and the impact on them has been immense. After the May 3 attack,
World Watch Monitor heard from a pastor in the area, who said the
people are terrified but that while some contemplated fleeing again,
others have opted to stay in the hope that things will return to normal.
In
a letter released a year ago, the Bishops of the Province of Bukavu in
eastern DR Congo denounced a “climate of genocide” and the passivity of
the Congolese State and international community.
“Does
the situation have to deteriorate even more before the international
community takes measures against jihadism?” asked the Bishops in May
2015, according to whom “a strategy of forced displacement of
populations is taking place in order to gradually occupy the land and
install outbreaks of religious fundamentalism and terrorist training
bases”, the Catholic news agency Fides reported.
Omar Kavota, Chief Executive of the Study Centre for the Promotion of Peace, Democracy and Human Rights told Radio Okapi the international community must intervene.
“We
are very concerned about this growing insecurity in the provinces of
North Kivu and Ituri,” he said. “In the past week, nearly 50 civilians
were killed. We are asking for international solidarity that finally
people in this part of the country can be safe from threats and live in
peace and lasting security.”
Some graphic images emerged after the May 3rd attack, showing the bodies of the women and children killed.
Radio
journalist Yassin Kumbi told French-language news media: “I’m used to
these attacks, since 2014, but I must admit that I discovered carnage
when I arrived in Eringeti. I was particularly shocked by the fact that
most of the victims were women and children. The smallest could have
been only a few months [old].”
Eight women – two of them pregnant – and four children died, according to official figures.
“I saw pregnant women and children slaughtered!” one local said.
Kumbi
added: “I spoke to survivors, who managed to escape. They were
traumatized and did not expect at all the attack. Announcements were
made on local radio to say that the area was under control and that
there had been no attack in the area of Beni for about a month. But just
after these announcements, the first attacks occurred in Kamangu, seven
miles from Eringeti. The upsurge in attacks suggests that the attackers
wanted to show that they were still there and ready to strike anytime.”
Photo
captions: 1) A woman mourns outside a morgue after more killings in DR
Congo. (AFP Photo/Kundra Maliro) 2) Thousands flee a village in Ituri,
taking everything they can carry, after an attack on May 6th. (World
Watch Monitor). 3) Victims of the fighting: Children in a DR Congo
displacement camp (Open Doors) 4) Dan Wooding doing a live TV report
from Seoul, South Korea.
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About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma,
to whom he has been married for nearly 53 years. They have two sons,
Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren, who all live in the UK. Dan is
the founder and international director of the ASSIST News Service (ANS),
and the author or co-author of some 45 books. Dan has a radio show and
two TV shows, all based in Southern California. He has reported from
across the globe for ANS and other media outlets.
*** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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