Congo security forces, opposing militia committed crimes against humanity: UN - Action News
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Congo security forces, opposing militia committed crimes against humanity: UN

Congolese security forces and militia have committed atrocities amounting to war crimes and crimes against humanity, including killing and raping women and children, UN human rights investigators said on Tuesday.

WARNING: This story contains graphic details some readers may find disturbing

A Congolese soldier holds up an RPG after searching with other soldiers for Mai-Mai Yakutumba rebels in Namoya, Maniema Province, on April 29. Two provinces to the west, in Kasai, villages have been burned and child soldiers conscripted, according to the United Nations. (Goran Tomasevic/Reuters)

Congolese security forces and militia have committed atrocities amounting to war crimes and crimes against humanity, including killing and raping women and children, UN human rights investigators said on Tuesday.

In a report denouncing "a serious problem of impunity," the independent experts called on authorities to prosecute perpetrators and provide justice to victims in the insurrection-ravaged Kasai region of central Congo, also known as Congo-Kinshasa.

Marie-Ange Mushobekwa, Congo's human rights minister, said the government was aware of the report's contents and she would present its reaction to the accusations at a debate in the Human Rights Council set for next Tuesday.

The armed forces (FARDC) and allied Bana Mura militia opposed the Kamuina Nsapu militia in a partially ethnic conflict that largely ended at the end of 2017.

It was marked by the burning down of villages, the UN report said, and Kamuina Nsapu forced child soldiers to decapitate enemies.

"Numerous acts have been committed by the FARDC and the Kamuina Nsapu militia against people not participating directly in the hostilities ... including murder, mutilation, rape and other forms of sexual violence, looting ... and conscription of children under age 15," the report said.

Elections long delayed

The conflict in the previously peaceful Kasai region was one of a series of deadly flareups to hit Congo around the time long-serving President Joseph Kabila refused to leave power when his mandate expired at the end of 2016.

An election to replace Kabila is now scheduled for December but he has yet to commit to stepping aside, further stoking tensions across the country where millions died in wars around the turn of the century.

In July 2017 a Congolese court convicted seven soldiers for the murder of suspected militia members in Kasai after a video showed soldiers shooting people, some of them young women, at point blank range.

The UN report, based on interviews with 524 victims, witnesses and perpetrators, focused on violations in Kasai where the year-long insurrection killed up to 5,000 people and forced some 1.5 million people from their homes.

"Many children have been abducted, wounded, mutilated, detained or executed," the report said.

Kasai is located on a map of Congo. The UN report focused on violations there, where the year-long insurrection killed up to 5,000 people and forced some 1.5 million people from their homes. (Google)

"Some saw their parents beaten, decapitated or their mothers raped. Many were forced to fight, put on the front lines without arms or with fake weapons, knives and sometimes traditional rifles. They were forced to kill and decapitate," it said.

Two UN sanctions monitors were killed last March in Kasai while investigating the conflict. More than a dozen people have been arrested in connection with the crime but separate UN experts complained in April that Congolese authorities were obstructing their efforts to assist the investigation.

Kabila's grip on power could be complicated by the expected return of former vice-president Jean-Pierre Bemba, who was recently acquitted on appeal at the International Criminal Court of war crimes.

Bemba had been found guilty in 2016 as a military commander of crimes against humanity and war crimes for a campaign of murder, rape and pillaging by his MLC troops in Central African Republic in 2002 and 2003.

Bemba remains a senator in Congo, as well as the general secretary of his Movement for the Liberation of Congo opposition party.