DRC: more than 40 dead in a new attack attributed to the ADF

A new attack attributed to ADF rebels, affiliated with the Islamic State group, killed more than 40 people overnight from Wednesday to Thursday in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo according to local authorities, in a province also plagued by M23 rebellion.

“The toll, still provisional, is 38 people killed in Mukondi and eight in Mausa”, two villages close to each other in the territory of Beni, in the northern part of North Kivu province, said Kalunga Meso, the leader of the local groupement (group of villages) told AFP.

This notable adds that “the ADF gathered people to then execute them”.

The human toll is confirmed by Arsène Mumbere, president of the local civil society, who specifies that the assailants “entered the village Mukondi without noise” and killed most of the victims “with bladed weapons”.

According to him, in Mausa the bodies of the victims were found “charred in burnt houses”. The excavation is still in progress because the dwellings are far from each other, he added.

“On the night of March 8 to 9, militiamen from the Mwalika Valley set fire to the village of Mukondi” and “killed at least 36 people with knives”, published Thursday morning on his Twitter account the Barometer du Kivu (KST), a network of analysts based in eastern DRC.

The provincial authorities have not yet communicated on this attack.

The ADF (Allied Democratic Forces) are originally mainly Muslim Ugandan rebels, who have been rooting since the mid-1990s in eastern DRC where they are accused of having massacred thousands of civilians.

In 2021, attacks on Ugandan soil were also attributed to them and a joint military operation between the Congolese and Ugandan armies was launched to hunt them down in North Kivu and in the neighboring province of Ituri.

The United States last week offered a reward of up to $5 million for any information that might lead to its leader, a Ugandan in his 40s named Musa Baluku.

security Council

According to the KST, the ADF, presented by the jihadist group Islamic State as its branch in central Africa, have killed nearly 150 people since the beginning of the year, including this latest attack.

Further south, the province of North Kivu has also been the scene of fighting for more than a year between the Congolese army and the M23 rebels, supported by Rwanda according to Kinshasa and UN experts.

After several announcements of cessation of hostilities remained without effect in recent months, a ceasefire was supposed to come into force on Tuesday.

But the guns did not stop and the M23 continued to expand its territory.

A Security Council delegation is expected Thursday evening in Kinshasa, for a three-day working visit which should also take it to Goma, the capital of North Kivu, a city of more than a million inhabitants wedged between Rwanda to the east, Lake Kivu to the south and the M23 rebels to the north and west.

The representatives of the Council intend to “assess the security and humanitarian situation in North Kivu”, indicated in a press release the UN Mission in the country (Monusco), and “evaluate the context in which this force is evolving”.

Present in the DRC for 23 years and still strong today with more than 16,000 men, Monusco is increasingly criticized in the country for its inability to put an end to the violence that has been going on in the East for nearly 30 years.

Dozens of armed groups operate in the region, many of which are a legacy of regional wars that erupted in the 1990s-2000s.


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