By Le Figaro with AFP
Published
Seventeen people taken hostage the day before in the north-east of the Democratic Republic of Congo were executed on Sunday March 26 by the community militia Codeco (Cooperative for the development of Congo), we learned from local sources.
Saturday at least “seventeen people had been taken hostage by Codeco militiamen between the Bambu and Kobu villages”, in the territory of Djugu, regarding 45 km north of Bunia (Ituri province), Banguneni Gbalande, head of the Akongo-Nyali community where the facts took place, told AFP. These people were in two vehicles traveling from Bunia, the provincial capital, to the mining town of Mongbwalu when their convoy was ambushed, he explained.
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On Sunday, these hostages were “executed at Pechi village, stronghold of Codeco”he said, indicating that he had been “alert by the families of some Mongbwalu victims”. THE “hostages died, they were executed by Codeco militiamen”, confirmed to AFP Toko Kagbanese, another local traditional leader. A resident of Bambu told AFP that the hostage-taking took place following the death of three Codeco militiamen who fell into an ambush by a rival militia in this locality. A pregnant woman was among the hostages, said the source, who did not wish to be identified for security reasons.
Thousands of dead
Since the end of 2022, there have been dozens of deaths almost every week in Ituri, a province rich in gold. More than thirty people, including many women and children, were massacred on March 18 in several villages. The Codeco militiamen were accused of this killing. The Codeco is a militia of several thousand men which claims to protect the Lendu tribe once morest a rival tribe, the Hema, defended by another militia, the “Zaire”.
After a decade of lull, the deadly conflict in Ituri between Hema and Lendu resumed at the end of 2017, causing the flight of more than one and a half million people and the death of thousands of civilians. The previous conflict between community militias caused thousands of deaths between 1999 and 2003, until the intervention of a European force, Operation Artemis, under French command.