Skip to main content

DR Congo: Several deaths in anti-Kabila protests

Tear gas was fired at the protesters in the capital, Kinshasa (Reuters) 

At least five people have been killed in widespread protests in the Democratic Republic of Congo, United Nations sources say.
Protesters are demanding that President Joseph Kabila - whose expected term of office expired more than a year ago - should step down.
Police have used teargas to disperse protesters in the capital, where UN peacekeepers have been deployed.
Similar demonstrations three weeks ago led to a number of deaths.
A spokesman for the UN mission to the country said 33 people were injured in Sunday's clashes and that dozens had been arrested.
Jean-Baptise Sondji, a former minister, told AFP a 16-year-old girl had died in the protests.
"An armoured car passed in front of the church. They began firing live bullets... a girl who was at the left side door of the church was hit," he said.
The widespread marches had been called for by the country's Catholic Church, which appealed for a large but peaceful demonstration.
The Congolese authorities, however, banned the marches and no formal permission was given. On Saturday evening, internet access in the capital Kinshasa was cut.
Police warned that they would not tolerate "any attempt to disturb public order."
Despite the ban, protesters gathered after morning mass on Sunday to march through the streets, accompanied by members of the clergy.
Local media outlet Radio Okapi reported protests in Kinshasa, Kisangani, and Bukavu. Other cities remain quiet, it reports, though a heavy police presence has been seen in many places.
The UN mission in the country - which has been running continually since 1999 - said it deployed its troops to the streets to observe and record any violence.
President Kabila has been in power since 2001, and was supposed to step down after his second and final term came to an end in 2016.
Under a deal reached more than a year ago, he was due to step down by the end of 2017 - but that has not happened.
Instead, the election to replace him, originally planned for 2016, has now been delayed until December 2018.
The country's powerful Catholic Church has been a voice of opposition to Mr Kabila. The Church also called for the demonstrations in late December which led to at least seven deaths, according to UN peacekeepers.
Dozens were arrested in the aftermath of those protests.
Sunday's demonstrations were also backed by the country's Muslim community. Before the march, representative Cheikh Ali Mwinyi M'Kuur told AFP: "I ask the authorities to avoid repressing the march."
"If they decide to repress, there will be no peace. But if they let the march take place, they will respect the constitution and peace will prevail," he said.
DR Congo's evangelical Christian churches also lent their support to the march organised by their Catholic counterparts.
Source: BBC 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ex-VP Mujuru 'was hit on the cheek with a stone by Zanu-PF activist': Spokesperson

Harare - A Zimbabwean opposition leader and her entourage were Thursday attacked with stones by suspected ruling party activists in Harare, her party said. Joice Mujuru, a former vice president of the country who is now leader of the National People's Party (NPP), and her supporters were pelted while on the campaign trail. Zimbabwe is due to hold general elections before July - the first polls since independence hero Robert Mugabe was ousted after 37 years in power. Mujuru is one of the prominent contenders. Mujuru was hit on the cheek with a stone and later addressed a rally in the working class suburb of Glen Norah after she received medical treatment, her spokesperson said. Mujuru "was going to address a rally ...she passed through a shopping centre and when people realised it was her, they came out of the shops to cheer her", Jeffryson Chitando told AFP. "She got out of her car and greeted the people, and that is when Zanu-PF (activists) started thro...

ZIMBABWE : Grace Mugabe heckler dies in car crash, reports say

Harare – Zanu-PF youth leader Magura Charumbira, who made headlines in November after he booed former first lady Grace Mugabe during a Bulawayo interface rally has reportedly died. According to  New Zimbabwe.com , officials confirmed that Charumbira died on Monday morning "after his car crashed into a stationary lorry along the Harare-Bulawayo road near Norton", 40km outside the capital. A  Chronicle report  said that Charumbira was on his way to Harare when the accident occurred.  Charumbira led a group of youths into heckling and booing Grace as she gave her speech during a presidential interface rally in Bulawayo in November.   The incident  angered then president Robert Mugabe who spoke at the same rally  shortly after his wife, accusing his then deputy  Emmerson Mnangagwa  of organising and sponsoring the hecklers. Mugabe vowed at the time to fire Mnangagwa, which he did two days later, in a dramatic move that was seen at the ...

SOUTH AFRICAN: Table Mountain climbers: Cape Town rescuers find bodies

The bodies of a tourist and his guide have been recovered from South Africa's Table Mountain following an accident which trapped hundreds of people at the top of the popular attraction. The man, his local guide and a second tourist are reported to have been using ropes to scale the front of the Cape Town mountain when they fell on Monday. Rescuers then used the cable car to reach the surviving climber. But the bodies were not recovered until first light on Tuesday. Africa Live: Read more on this and other stories from around the continent The tourists are understood to be of Asian origin while the guide was a South African, a spokeswoman for South Africa's Sanparks, which runs the country's national parks, told the BBC. According to Table Mountain Cableway, the service - which takes thousands of people up and down the mountain every day - was out of action for about four hours, closing an hour after the group was first spotted. John Marais, of Wilderness Sea...