The Columbus Dispatch

36 Burundi refugees killed in clashes

- By Eloge Willy Kaneza and Saleh Mwanamilon­go

BUJUMBURA, Burundi — At least 36 Burundian refugees have been killed in clashes with Congolese security forces who allegedly fired indiscrimi­nately at protesters, the U.N. envoy to Congo said Saturday.

Maman Sidikou said he was “deeply shocked” at the violence. Another 117 people were wounded and one Congolese officer was killed, he said in a statement. Thirty-nine gravely wounded Burundian refugees were evacuated by helicopter to the city of Bukavu, the U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission in Congo said.

Friday’s clashes erupted in Kamanyola in Congo’s South Kivu province when Burundian refugees and asylum-seekers protested the expulsion of four of their countrymen from Congo, Sidikou said, citing “credible reports” received by the peacekeepi­ng mission. The death of the Congolese army officer led to “the escalation of violence.”

The U.N. envoy called for a swift investigat­ion and urged Congo’s security forces to use force as a last resort.

Congo’s government says it is opening an investigat­ion to establish the facts and true identity of the “supposed refugees,” spokesman Lambert Mende said.

“We do not yet understand how the people who are being called refugees were also shooting at Congolese soldiers,” Mende said. “No person who is a beneficiar­y of this (refugee) status is supposed to have an assault rifle.”

Roughly 44,000 refugees from Burundi are sheltering in Congo. Many fled political violence at home in 2015, when President Pierre Nkurunziza successful­ly pursued a disputed third term amid deadly protests.

Of the people killed in Friday’s clashes, 15 were women, the commander of the Pakistani battalion of the U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission, Waquara Yunusi, told The Associated Press.

The Congolese government, the U.N refugee agency and the U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission in Congo “have deployed teams on site to shed light on everything that happened,” said the coordinato­r of the U.N. Communicat­ions Group in Congo, Florence Marchal.

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