BENI, Congo
The remains of at least 20 people were found buried in a mass grave in an area used to cultivate cacao in Ndoma village in Congo’s North Kivu province this weekend, according to local authorities and a military spokesperson.
A team of forensic and
security officers exhumed the bodies after residents of villages in Beni
territory found bones and clothing and alerted officials.
Until earlier this year, the
area had been under the control of the Allied Democratic Forces, or ADF, a
rebel militia with links to the Islamic State group. The area is now controlled
by the Congolese army.
Muyisa Kambale Sindani,
representative of nearby Kilya village, said Saturday that the remains were
reburied “with dignity and security.”
He confirmed that bones of at
least 20 people were found, but that it wasn’t possible to search further
because of a lack of security in the region.
It wasn’t immediately clear
how long the bodies had been there.
Eastern Congo has been plagued
by violence for decades as more than 120 armed groups fight for power,
influence and resources and some to protect their communities.
The ADF attacks have
concentrated on North Kivu province, but the group has recently extended its
operations into neighboring Ituri province and to areas near the regional
capital, Goma, in South Kivu.
The rebels are accused by the
U.N. and rights groups of targeting, maiming, raping and abducting civilians,
including children. Capt. Anthony Mwalushayi, regional spokesperson for the
Congolese army said the area had been an ADF stronghold.
“There are innocent people who
have been buried here. This is really a mass grave, “ he said, but noted that
among the bones that were found, there were military insignias.
Mwalushayi pledged authorities
would investigate and bring those responsible to justice.
Local residents are demanding
more protection from the government but also justice.
“We demand justice to be done
so that the perpetrators of this massacre answer for their actions and set an
example for other rebels to stop killing us unfairly” said Richard Kakule, a
farmer from Ndoma. After the forensic and experts collected the remains and
placed them in white body bags, locals organized a small ceremony and sang
while burying the bodies with their own hands. ADF rebels have been active in
eastern Congo for decades and have killed thousands in the region since they
resurfaced in 2013.
Earlier this year, the United
States offered a reward of up to $5 million for information that could lead to
the capture of the group’s leader, Seka Musa Baluku.
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