Over fifty villagers
have been killed in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s Ituri province, by Islamist
militants, a local official said on Thursday.
The
authorities blamed the attacks on Tuesday and Wednesday on the Allied
Democratic Forces (ADF), a Ugandan armed group active in eastern Congo since
the 1990s.
The militia
has killed more than 1,000 civilians since the start of 2019, according to U.N.
figures, despite repeated military campaigns aimed at destroying it.
On Tuesday
night into Wednesday, ADF fighters attacked the villages of Tsabi and Tondoli,
around 120 km (75 miles) south of the city of Bunia, officials said.
Etienne
Babawela, a local village chief, said 53 bodies had been discovered so far.
“We don’t
know how many deaths there will be tomorrow,” he said. “It’s as if they had
lots of time on Tuesday and Wednesday while they were killing people.”
The United
Nations says violence attributed to the ADF has soared since the start of the
year, following the launch of a large-scale army campaign.
In response,
the ADF abandoned its bases, split into smaller, more mobile groups, and took
revenge on civilians.
Several
attacks attributed to the ADF have also been claimed by Islamic State, although
researchers and analysts say there is a lack of hard evidence linking the two
groups.
Violence committed by a constellation of more than 100 armed
groups has forced over half a million people in the east of the country to flee
their homes since the start of the year.
Millions of people died in eastern Congo, most from hunger and
disease, during wars from 1996 to 2003 that sucked in more than half a dozen
neighbouring countries.
Congo’s military and security forces have also committed grave
violations, including killings and sexual violence, the United Nations has
said.
Violence committed by a
constellation of more than 100 armed groups has forced over half a million
people in the east of the country to flee their homes since the start of the
year.
Millions of
people died in eastern Congo, most from hunger and disease, during wars from
1996 to 2003 that sucked in more than half a dozen neighbouring countries.
Congo’s
military and security forces have also committed grave violations, including
killings and sexual violence, the United Nations has said.
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