The Herald (South Africa)

Kidnapped journalist found safe in Congo

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A US journalist kidnapped by a militia group in the Democratic Republic of Congo was found safe early yesterday, a senior official said, as another source said five people had been killed in clashes.

“The American journalist Lisa Dupuy was found safe and sound at around 3am on Sunday” by government troops, Pacifique Keta, vice-governor of Ituri province, said.

The troops were deployed after Dupuy and 11 wardens working for the Okapi Wildlife Reserve (RFO) – a vast conservati­on park in northeaste­rn DR Congo – were abducted on Friday by the Mai-Mai Simba militia group.

“The outcome of the military operation has not yet been establishe­d, because the army is still at work,” Keta said.

Separately, a senior official with the Congolese Institute for the Conservati­on of Nature (ICCN), speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed that the journalist was safe.

“However, four of our wardens and a civilian who was working as a tracker were killed in clashes,” he said. “The army also killed bandits, but I don’t know how many.”

A former Belgian colony, the DR Congo is a vast country rich in minerals and timber but wracked by decades of war and poverty.

The east of the country is especially troubled. It has been gripped by more than 20 years of armed conflict among domestic and foreign groups, fuelled by struggle for control of lucrative resources as well as ethnic and property disputes.

The Mai-Mai Simba are self-described self-defence militia groups drawn from the Nande, Hunde and Kobo communitie­s as well as rivals from the Nyaturu, who represent ethnic Hutus.

Many of these groups were armed during the DR Congo’s second war -- a conflict that ran from 1998-2003 -- to fight incursion by Rwandan or Ugandan combatants, and have never been disarmed.

The RFO, a World Heritage site, covers nearly 14 000km2, protecting much of the Ituri forest near the borders with South Sudan and Uganda.

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