Dozens die and many more missing after horrific attack by suspected militia at a mining camp in eastern Congo

Civil society leaders estimate between 30 and 50 people were killed. Picture: Reuters.

Civil society leaders estimate between 30 and 50 people were killed. Picture: Reuters.

Published May 9, 2022

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Kinshasa – Dozens of people were killed and many more are missing after armed men raided a mining camp near the town of Mongwalu in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s eastern Ituri province on Sunday, three civil society leaders said.

Army spokesperson Jules Ngongo Tsikudi confirmed that a deadly attack had taken place at a mining camp near Mongwalu, but did not detail the number of casualties.

“In the following hours we will know the exact number of deaths,” Tsikudi said late on Sunday. “The army is working day and night to completely eliminate the armed groups here in Ituri.”

Civil society leaders estimated that between 30 and 50 people were killed. One said the local hospital had been overwhelmed by the number of victims.

Dieudonné Lossa, who leads a collective of civil society groups in Ituri, blamed the killings on the Codeco militia, which has built a reputation for attacking civilian encampments.

Its fighters killed 18 people at a church last month, and another 60 at a displaced persons camp in February, authorities have said.

“The authorities were warned because rumours were already circulating, but misfortune followed,” Lossa said.

Attacks on civilians are daily hazards in Congo’s eastern provinces, where groups like Codeco and other warring militias, as well as a local Islamic State affiliate, routinely spar for territory and resources.

Such conflicts have claimed the lives of thousands and displaced millions more since the turn of the decade, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council.

This month marks one year since Congo’s government declared martial law in Ituri and its neighbouring North Kivu province to quell the violence. But deadly raids have only surged since then, according to the Kivu Security Tracker, which monitors conflict in the region.

Reuters