San Diego Union-Tribune

CONGO PREPARES FOR ATTACKS

- BENI, Congo

Authoritie­s in eastern Congo announced an evening curfew and new security checkpoint­s Sunday, fearing more violence after a suicide bomber killed five people in the first attack of its kind in the region.

Beni Mayor Narcisse Muteba, a police colonel, warned hotels, churches and bars in the town of Beni that they needed to add security guards with metal detectors because “terrorists” could strike again.

“We are asking people to be vigilant and to avoid public places during this festive period,“Muteba said Sunday.

Brig. Gen. Constant Ndima, the military governor of North Kivu province, said there will be a 7 p.m. curfew, as well as more road checkpoint­s.

Officials initially said the death toll was six plus the suicide bomber, but they revised that figure a day later to five victims. Thirteen others remained hospitaliz­ed after the blast at the entrance to the Inbox restaurant on Christmas Day.

Saturday’s bloodshed dramatical­ly deepened fears that Islamic extremism has taken hold in Beni. The town already has suffered years of attacks by rebels from the Allied Democratic Forces, or ADF, who trace their origins to neighborin­g Uganda.

Officials have blamed the latest attack on those rebels, whose exact links to internatio­nal extremist groups have been murky. The Islamic State’s Central Africa Province has claimed responsibi­lity for attacks blamed on ADF, but it is unknown what role exactly the larger organizati­on may have played in organizing and financing the attacks.

There have been worrying signs that religious extremism was escalating around Beni: Two local imams were killed earlier this year within weeks of each other, one of whom had spoken out against the ADF.

Then in June, the Islamic State group’s Central Africa Province claimed responsibi­lity for a suicide bomber who blew himself up near a bar in Beni without harming others. Another explosion that same day at a Catholic church wounded two people.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for Saturday’s attack, in which authoritie­s say the bomber ultimately was stopped from entering the crowded restaurant. After the blast near the entrance, blood stained the pavement and mangled chairs lay strewn near the entrance.

Rachel Magali, who had been at the restaurant, described hearing a loud noise and then people crying.

“We rushed to the exit where I saw people lying down,” she said. “There were green plastic chairs scattered everywhere and I also saw heads and arms no longer attached. It was really horrible.”

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