• Articles
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • الرئيسية
  • Latest News
  • News
  • Privacy Policy
  • نتائج البحث
  • Shopping
  • Site Map
  • Terms of Use
  • Lea éstos también

    • Malawi VP Klaus Chilima arrested over bribery allegations
    • Spare the children from war, Uhuru pleads as he visits DRC’s Goma
    • Ruto, Museveni pitch business and tech relations in east Asia trips
    • South Sudan to send 750 soldiers to DR Congo to fight rebels
    • Kagame defends Africa’s right to a partnership with China
    • We’ve made progress, Uhuru says as Nairobi meeting on DRC ends
    • Burkina Faso denies paying Russian mercenaries with mine rights
  • Affiliate Disclaimer

    This website is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program.
  • Articles
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Shopping

M23 urged to stop targeting civilians as 50 killed in east DRC

Daisy I. Posted On 2022-12-03
0


0
Shares
  • Share On Facebook
  • Tweet It

Emotions are still running high after the killing of civilians in Kishishe, in the chiefdom of Bwito, Rutshuru territory, about 100 kilometres from Goma in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

According to the Congolese army, 50 civilians were killed by the M23 rebels with the massacre being condemned by various agencies.

In the DRC, the government declared three days of national mourning while the United Nations Organisation Stabilisation Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Monusco denounced “these appalling acts”.

In its statement, Monusco called on “all relevant authorities to investigate without delay and bring the perpetrators to justice”.

Amnesty International also reacted by calling on M23 to cease targeting civilians following the killing of dozens of non-combatants in towns in the east of the DRC in recent days in indiscriminate attacks and, in some cases, summary killings.

“The M23 rebel group must immediately end deliberate and indiscriminate attacks on civilians,” said Flavia Mwangovya, Amnesty International’s deputy director for East Africa, the Horn and Great Lakes Region.

Protect civilians

“We urge all forces in the area, including the Congolese army and the East African Community Regional Force, to take all necessary measures to protect the civilian population while respecting international humanitarian law,” Ms Mwangovya added.

Human Rights Watch is also calling for an independent investigation and sanctions. The massacre of civilians in Kishishe could constitute a war crime, said Stephanie Miley, charge d’affaires of the US embassy in Kinshasa.

Young men targeted

According to local civil society sources in North Kivu, the M23 targeted young men from Kashishe who had previously ambushed the rebels through community defence groups. The bloody attack also claimed the lives of children and elderly people.

According to the Congolese army (FARDC, several other civilians are now missing or have been kidnapped by the M23.

General Sylvain Ekenge, the spokesman of the Congolese army, also denounced the forced recruitment of young people by the M23 and the use of children in the fighting.

The fighting resumed Thursday in North Kivu in violation of the ceasefire decreed in Luanda, Angola.

On November 23, East African heads of state and other political leaders from the region declared a ceasefire.

Related Posts

  • Surrender or face military action, rebel groups in DR Congo toldSurrender or face military action, rebel groups in DR Congo told
  • New clashes erupt between DR Congo army and M23 rebelsNew clashes erupt between DR Congo army and M23 rebels
  • Truce holds in east DR Congo despite ambushes by rival militiasTruce holds in east DR Congo despite ambushes by rival militias
  • Distrust mars deal to relaunch Sudan’s political transitionDistrust mars deal to relaunch Sudan’s political transition
  • Kenyans usher in year of political reformsKenyans usher in year of political reforms
0
Shares
  • Share On Facebook
  • Tweet It




Trending Now
Explainer: Why peace has eluded South Sudan for a decade
Daisy I. 2023-02-04
Heavy sentences for Kenyan policemen who killed lawyer
Daisy I. 2023-02-04
Rwanda expects GMO responsibility as African scientists back Kenya
Read Next

Rwanda expects GMO responsibility as African scientists back Kenya

  • Lea éstos también

    • Mozambique body-burning video sparks regional uproarMozambique body-burning video sparks regional uproar
    • Mediators walk a tightrope with mention of fear of pollsMediators walk a tightrope with mention of fear of polls
    • Uhuru Kenyatta appeals for end to escalating DR Congo violenceUhuru Kenyatta appeals for end to escalating DR Congo violence
    • Uhuru Kenyatta arrives in Burundi for talks on DR Congo crisisUhuru Kenyatta arrives in Burundi for talks on DR Congo crisis
    • President Ruto looks East to get Kenya affordable project financingPresident Ruto looks East to get Kenya affordable project financing
    • Precision Air crash: Tanzanian NGO loses 5 employeesPrecision Air crash: Tanzanian NGO loses 5 employees
    • ‘I decided to run’: Survivors tell of escape from DR Congo massacre‘I decided to run’: Survivors tell of escape from DR Congo massacre


  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
© Este medio no es responsable del contenido sometido por sus lectores. DMCA Policy
Press enter/return to begin your search