14 civilians die in DR Congo machete attack: official

14 civilians die in DR Congo machete attack: official
A ranger clears a path using a machete through thick elephant grass at the Garamba National Park, northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)on February 3, 2016. (AFP)
Updated 07 October 2018
Follow

14 civilians die in DR Congo machete attack: official

14 civilians die in DR Congo machete attack: official
  • North and South Kivu provinces have been in the grip of inter-ethnic bloodshed between militia groups
  • The violence in the border region sees near-daily killings, rape, mutilations and other atrocities

GOMA, DR Congo: Machete-wielding attackers killed at least 14 civilians in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s restive North Kivu province, a local official said Sunday, in a wave of violence plaguing the mineral-rich region.
A further nine people were injured in the assault near the village of Rubaya some 60 kilometers (35 miles) north of the province’s capital Goma, regional governor Cosmas Kangakolo told AFP.
He said a battalion of the Congolese army and police officers had been dispatched to Rubaya.
“The attackers arrived in my neighborhood. I hid but two neighbors were killed by machetes,” local resident Pascal said.
An armed Hutu militia known as the Mai-Mai Nyatura has been operating in the Masisi territory, where Rubaya is located. The region is a hub for mining coltan, a key component in cell phones and other electronic equipment.
For more than 20 years, North and South Kivu provinces have been in the grip of inter-ethnic bloodshed between militia groups, which often extort money from civilians or fight each other for control of mineral resources.
The violence in the border region sees near-daily killings, rape, mutilations and other atrocities.
The latest attack came after Congolese doctor Denis Mukwege was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for his dedication in helping women overcome the injuries and trauma of sexual abuse and rape in South Kivu province.
He was also part of an international campaign calling on multinational companies to control their supply chain to ensure they are not buying so-called “blood minerals,” which fuel the violence in eastern DRC.