Government complicity in ethnic-based massacres in Kasai
DRC: Victims’ harrowing accounts indicate
Government complicity in ethnic-based massacres in Kasai –
UN report
GENEVA (4 August 2017) – Violence in
the Kasai provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
appears to be taking on an increasing and disturbing ethnic
dimension, a report by the UN Human Rights Office has
warned. Information gathered by a team of UN human rights
investigators* suggests that some of the violations and
abuses committed in the Kasais may amount to crimes under
international law.
The report is based on interviews with
96 people who had fled to neighbouring Angola to escape the
violence in Kamonia territory in Kasai. The UN team was able
to confirm that between 12 March and 19 June some 251 people
were the victims of extrajudicial and targeted killings.
These included 62 children, of which 30 were aged under
eight. Interviewees indicated that local security forces and
other officials actively fomented, fuelled, and occasionally
led, attacks on the basis of ethnicity. The UN Mission in
the DRC has identified at least 80 mass graves in the
Kasais.
The team saw people who had been seriously
injured or mutilated, including a seven-year-old boy who had
had several fingers cut off and his face totally disfigured.
A woman whose arm had been chopped off recounted how she
managed to escape, hiding for several days in the forest
before reaching the Angolan border and being airlifted to
hospital. Some of the refugees pleaded with the UN team to
be heard, and two of the people they interviewed died
shortly afterwards from their injuries.
“Survivors have
spoken of hearing the screams of people being burned alive,
of seeing loved ones chased and cut down, of themselves
fleeing in terror. Such bloodletting is all the more
horrifying because we found indications that people are
increasingly being targeted because of their ethnic
group,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid
Ra’ad Al Hussein. “Their accounts should serve as a
grave warning to the Government of the DRC to act now to
prevent such violence from tipping into wider ethnic
cleansing.”
“I call on the Government to take all
necessary measures to fulfil its primary obligation to
protect people from all ethnic backgrounds in the greater
Kasai area,” he added.
The fighting began in August
2016 between the Kamuina Nsapu militia and the Government.
The UN team was able to confirm that another militia, called
the Bana Mura, was formed around March/April 2017 by
individuals from the Tshokwe, Pende and Tetela ethnic
groups. It was allegedly armed and supported by local
traditional leaders and security officials, including from
the army and the police, to attack the Luba and Lulua
communities who are accused of being accomplices of the
Kamuina Nsapu.
According to the report, “the Bana Mura
allegedly undertook a campaign aimed at eliminating the
entire Luba and Lulua populations in the villages they
attacked.” In many of the incidents reported to the team,
FARDC soldiers were seen leading groups of Bana Mura militia
during attacks on villages.
“The Government’s
responsibility includes ensuring that those who organised,
recruited and armed the Bana Mura or other militias are
identified and prosecuted,” the High Commissioner
stressed.
Many Luba and Lulua witnesses and victims said
that the Bana Mura militia carried out what appeared to be
well-planned attacks on several villages in Kamonia
territory in April and May. Wearing white bandanas made from
mosquito nets and bracelets of leaves, the Bana Mura
attacked Luba and Lulua inhabitants, beheading, mutilating
and shooting victims; in some cases burning them alive in
their homes.
In one of the most shocking attacks, in the
village of Cinq, 90 patients, colleagues and people who had
sought refuge in a health centre were killed, including
patients who could not escape when the surgical ward was set
on fire.
Victims’ accounts included a woman who told
the team how the militia killed her husband, attacked her
daughter with machetes, and shot her and her 22-month-old
son, who later had to have his leg amputated at a hospital
in Angola. The team also heard accounts of rape and other
forms of sexual and gender-based violence.
People also
told the UN team that the Kamuina Nsapu militia carried out
targeted killings, including against the military, police,
and public officials.
In all incidents documented by
the team, the Kamuina Nsapu were reported to have used boys
and girls, many aged between seven and 13, as fighters.
Witnesses also said groups of girls called “Lamama”
accompanied the militia, shaking their straw skirts and
drinking victims’ blood as part of a magic ritual that was
supposed to render the group invincible. All the refugees
interviewed by the team said they were convinced of the
magical powers of the Kamuina Nsapu.
“This generalised
belief, and resulting fear, by segments of the population in
the Kasais may partly explain why a poorly armed militia,
composed to a large extent of children, has been able to
resist offensives by a national army for over a year,” the
report says.
Given the situation in the Kasais, the
report highlights the need for the team of international
experts on the situation in the Kasais, established in June
by the UN Human Rights Council, to be granted safe and
unrestricted access to information, sites and individuals
deemed necessary for their work.
This report will be put
at the disposal of the international experts, as well as any
other judicial institution addressing the human rights
situation in the Kasais, in an effort to advance
accountability efforts in this regard.
ENDS
*The UN
team was deployed to Angola from 13 to 23 June.
Read the
report – Accounts of Congolese fleeing the crisis in the
Kasai region, in the democratic Republic of the Congo –
here: www.ohchr.org/Documents/Countries/Africa/OHCHRMissionreportonaccountsofKasairefugees.docx