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DRC: Arbitrary killings, rape
part of ongoing abuses in the east
April 19, 2007 (IRIN) - Executions and rape of
civilians have continued in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo
(DRC) according to a report published by the United Nations detailing
human rights abuses during the month of March.
Among the abuses was the arbitrary execution on
10 March of 15 civilians who were shot in the head in a North Kivu
village by soldiers of DRC’s national army.
The report, released by the UN Mission in the DRC
(MONUC) on Monday, claims the soldiers were from the Forces armées
de la république démocratique du Congo’s (FARDC)
recently mixed Bravo Brigade in Buramba village, 106 km from Goma
town. The killings followed the death of four soldiers in a separate
clash in a nearby village.
Included in the report were details of numerous
killings, including the shootings in February of civilians in Rughenda
and Butemba in North Kivu; Kabamba, north of Bukavu; and Katwiguru,
north of Goma. In March, killings also occurred in Bankoko, Bunia,
and Ituri; Rubaya, southwest of Goma; and in Mahagi, Ituri district;
among others.
"FARDC soldiers were responsible for numerous
incidents of arbitrary executions and other human rights violations,
particularly the right to physical integrity and to liberty and
security of persons throughout the DRC," the report noted.
In some cases, the perpetrators were detained.The FARDC is an integrated
national army, comprising former rebel fighters, militias and soldiers
from the former national army.
Numerous cases of alleged rape are listed, including
that of two women in Bakwa Nsumpi near Mbuji Mayi. "Both perpetrators,
who confessed to the crime of rape and abduction, were arrested
and detained at the Bipemba police station," the report said.
"They were later transferred to the Office of the Military
Prosecutor."
Another case involved two 13-year-old girls who
were abducted and raped near Butembo on their way back from a funeral.
They were threatened and intimidated by the alleged perpetrator
who made them walk for approximately 1 km before raping them. The
perpetrator escaped arrest.
In Nyamukubi, north Kivu, an 11-year-old girl was
allegedly raped by two soldiers. "The little girl was raped
because her parents had resisted the illegal occupation of their
family residence by soldiers newly deployed to the locality,"
MONUC said.
According to the report, FARDC soldiers have also
continued to regularly commit human rights violations in the diamond-rich
territory of Bafwasende of Orientale Province, 262 km east of Kisangani.
In Mvuelle, near Matadi, the soldiers allegedly
extort goods and money from the local population by imposing fines
on people involved in disputes. "The soldiers acted as judges
in disputes among the villagers and then request goats, chickens
and money from the local population as fines for their services,"
MONUC said.
''The soldiers acted as judges in disputes among
the villagers and then request goats, chickens and money from the
local population as fines for their services''
The report also details cases of arrests, rape
and killings by police. "Other security forces were implicated
in several cases of human rights violations," it noted.
Meanwhile, children are still being recruited for
the North Kivu brigades within the DRC and also from across the
border in Rwanda, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said. Quoting international
and local child protection workers, it said 300 and 500 children,
some as young as 13, currently serve in newly formed army brigades.
"The Congolese government should immediately
stop former rebel warlords now commissioned as national army officers
from recruiting and using child soldiers in army brigades deployed
in North Kivu province," HRW said in a statement on Thursday.
From:http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=71700
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