Malta Independent

At least 26 killed in protests, rights group says

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Security forces in Congo killed at least 26 demonstrat­ors Tuesday and arrested scores more amid protests against President Joseph Kabila’s hold on power, a rights group said. The deaths were the first reported since Kabila’s mandate ended at midnight.

Military and police forces were firing live bullets, raising fears that more people have been killed, Human Rights Watch said. Its researcher Ida Sawyer said on Twitter that the killings took place in the capital, Kinshasa, the southern city of Lubumbashi and elsewhere. Residents told the group that Republican Guards were carrying out door-to-door searches and arresting youths. Protesters burned the headquarte­rs of the ruling party in Kinshasa. Kabila, who took office in 2001 after his father’s assassinat­ion, is constituti­onally barred from seeking another term, but a court has ruled that he can remain in power until new elections, which have been delayed indefinite­ly. They were meant to be in November, but the ruling party says it needs more time — until 2018, at least.

The leader of Congo’s largest opposition party, Etienne Tshisekedi, urged peaceful resistance to what he called Kabila’s “coup d’etat.” In a statement posted on YouTube on Tuesday, he called the president’s actions “treason” and appealed to the Congolese people and the internatio­nal community to no longer recognize Kabila’s authority.

Political talks between the ruling party and opposition, which stalled over the weekend, were expected to resume on Wednesday with mediators from the Catholic church.

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