GOMA, DR Congo
At least 10 people were killed Wednesday in eastern DR Congo after soldiers attempted to stop a religious sect's planned anti-UN protest, in the latest violence in the conflict-torn region.
The Christian-animist group
known as the "Natural Judaic and Messianic Faith towards the Nations"
had urged followers to enter United Nations bases and demand the departure of
peacekeepers.
Local authorities in the
eastern Congolese city of Goma banned the protest.
Leaders of the sect told AFP
on Tuesday that they had nonetheless identified the homes of UN officials in
the city and were prepared to loot them.
Early Wednesday, before the
protest could take place, Congolese soldiers descended on a radio station and
place of worship in Goma, killing six people, according to Moleka Maregane, who
is in charge of security for the sect.
A policemen was also lynched
in the violence, according to local officials.
Hospital workers said that 33
people were injured, with three later succumbing to their wounds.
The Democratic Republic of
Congo's east has been ravaged by militia violence for three decades, a legacy
of regional wars that flared in the 1990s and 2000s.
The United Nations peacekeeping mission in the region is one of the largest and costliest in the word, with an annual budge of about $1 billion (915,000,000 euros).
But the UN comes in for sharp
criticism in the central African nation, where many people perceive the
peacekeepers as failing to prevent conflict.A resident holds a placard reading ''MONUSCO get out without delay'' as they protest against the United Nations peacekeeping force (MONUSCO) deployed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, in Goma
The latest violence comes
after dozens of people, including four peacekeepers, were killed in anti-UN
protests across eastern DRC last year.
After years of debate over its
status, the UN peacekeeping force in the DRC, known as MONUSCO, is set to leave
the country.
The departure date remains
unclear.
Last year, Congolese President
Felix Tshisekedi told French media that there was no reason for MONUSCO to
remain beyond the December 2023 presidential election.
UN Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres also said in August that the peacekeeping mission is in its final
phase.
"MONUSCO continues to be
a focus of popular discontent and frustration over its perceived
inaction," Guterres said.
Although UN officials admit to
broad frustrations, they also argue that MONUSCO is subject to disinformation
spread by some local actors.
The force has a current strength of about 16,000 uniformed personnel, mainly deployed in the mineral-rich east.
The details of MONUSCO's
departure are being debated as militias continue to hold sway over much of
eastern DRC.
One group, the M23, has
captured swathes of territory in North Kivu province since 2021, for example.
Several western nations
including the United States and France, as well as independent UN experts, have
concluded that Rwanda is backing the Tutsi-led M23. Rwanda denies this,
however.
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