Daily Dispatch

Two wounded at DRC rally, priests held

Security forces fire bullets, tear gas at anti-Kabila protest

- Debout (Arise Congolese). Congolais

AT LEAST two people were wounded as police fired live bullets and tear gas yesterday to break up a banned protest against Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila in Kisangani – the country’s third-largest city – as tensions mounted nationwide.

Hundreds of demonstrat­ors began marching after Mass at the city’s cathedral but were dispersed by security forces’ fire.

After the two people suffered bullet injuries, the demonstrat­ors fled back into the cathedral singing the national anthem,

Three priests were arrested as they led a march in the Saint Pierre de Wagenia district in the east of the city. Officers took them away in a police vehicle.

Young people in Kisangani’s working class Mangobo district also gathered on the streets just metres from soldiers of the Republican Guard, the elite unit charged with protecting Kabila.

The protests come after months of tension sparked by Kabila’s prolonged rule and long-delayed elections in the DRC.

They were called by the Lay Coordinati­on Committee (CLC), an organisati­on close to the church and an influentia­l social and spiritual movement. But authoritie­s banned the demonstrat­ions.

Kabila was due to stand down from office in December 2016, ending his second elected term, but he has controvers­ially stayed on under laws enabling him to retain power until his successor is elected. In January he accused the church of interferin­g in Congolese politics.

Previous protests on New Year’s Eve and January 21 saw a total of 15 people killed by security forces, according to tolls given by organisers and the UN. The government said just two people died in the unrest.

In the capital Kinshasa, police put up barricades, searched vehicles and checked people’s IDs on Saturday evening.

But police presence was lighter yesterday than in the two previous protests. Residents had braced for a cut in internet services as had been the case before the two previous demonstrat­ions, but connection­s were normal yesterday.

Kinshasa police chief General Sylvano Kasongo said on Saturday he was under orders to “take measures to ensure the security of the population, and to stop anyone who attempts to disturb public order”.

But he added: “The goal is to have zero casualties.”

Hundreds of ruling party supporters had stormed Kinshasa cathedral on Saturday. “We have come to take possession of Our Lady of the Congo Cathedral to take part in Sunday mass ... and defend the homeland,” Papy Pungu, youth wing leader of the People’s Party for Reconstruc­tion and Democracy, said.

On Friday, the European Union, Switzerlan­d and Canada issued a joint statement underscori­ng the “importance of respecting fundamenta­l rights including the right to demonstrat­e”.

Political tensions in the DRC have been mounting since September 2016, when clashes between youths and security forces left dozens of people dead in Kinshasa. Fears have multiplied that the country, which experience­d wars from 1996-97 and from 1998-2003, could explode into violence once more.

The latest date given for elections is December 23 this year, two years later than scheduled. But Kabila has refused to state clearly whether he intends to stand again. —

 ??  ?? TENSE STAND-OFF: Policemen react after a protester threw a stone from the Notre Dame Cathedral compound in Kinshasa yesterday
TENSE STAND-OFF: Policemen react after a protester threw a stone from the Notre Dame Cathedral compound in Kinshasa yesterday
 ?? Pictures: REUTERS ?? WORSHIPPIN­G DURING TURMOIL: Protesters pray in front of policemen at the entrance to the Notre Dame Cathedral in Kinshasa yesterday
Pictures: REUTERS WORSHIPPIN­G DURING TURMOIL: Protesters pray in front of policemen at the entrance to the Notre Dame Cathedral in Kinshasa yesterday

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