Fighting kills more than 3,000 in Congo's Kasai region: Catholic Church
Congolese security
forces and a militia fighting them have killed at least 3,383 people in the
central Kasai region since October, the Catholic Church said on Tuesday, in the
most detailed report to date on the violence.
Church officials,
citing their own sources in the remote territory bordering Angola, said the
army had destroyed 10 villages as it sought to stamp out an insurrection.
They also accused
the Kamuina Nsapu militia of killing hundreds of people, destroying four
villages and attacking church property in a campaign to drive out central
government troops.
No one was
immediately available to comment from the militia or Democratic Republic of
Congo's army, which has dismissed accusations of excessive force in the past.
The clashes have
triggered fears of a wider conflict in the central African giant, a tinderbox
of ethnic rivalry and competing claims over mineral resources. Wars at the turn
of the century killed millions and sucked in neighbouring countries.
The church's report
will carry considerable weight in a country where about 40 percent of the
population identifies as Catholic.
Fighting surged in
Kasai in August when the army killed a chief who had been calling for central
government forces to quit the region, saying it should be left to local
leaders.
The violence has
stoked political tensions already heightened by President Joseph Kabila's
decision to stay in power beyond the December 2016 end of his mandate. Kasai is
an opposition stronghold.
The U.N. Human
Rights Council in Geneva is due to decide this week whether to authorize an
investigation into the Kasai violence. U.N. investigators say they have
discovered 42 mass graves.
Congo's government
opposes an international investigation, saying that would violate its
sovereignty.
The United Nations
says more than 1.3 million people have fled the fighting.
(Reporting by Aaron
Ross; Editing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Andrew Heavens)
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