Wednesday, June 10, 2020

9 dead,155 houses burnt and several property stolen by CODECO militias in ITURI

A new attack by assailants of the CODECO militia, on the night of Tuesday to Wednesday, June 10, 2020, left at least: 9 dead, 155 houses burned down, several goats and valuables taken away, in the Lenga village of the chiefdom of Bahema Badjere, in Djugu territory.
The chief of this chiefdom who alerted  authorities this Wednesday June 10, specifies that among the victims, there are 5 children.
"It was around 11:00 p.m. that an attack by CODECO militiamen was reported. They had to kill 9 people, including 3 men and 1 mother, but also 5 children under the age of 13 and one very seriously injured man was taken to the hospital, "explains Richard Dhedda Kondo.
He continues that this attack, which would have come from the Gokpa and Ndjaudha groups in the Walendu Djatsi sector, has caused a generalized suffering in the region.
“The population is really in a rush since the night. Innocents killed, houses burned down and property looted, it is truly unfortunate for everyone here.
We fear yet another attack, ”he said.
This customary authority invites its population to remain "vigilant" to denounce any suspicious movement. Chief Dhedda also requests, from the military command in Ituri, the establishment of a military base in Lenga.
"The government must do everything to neutralize these negative forces that are operating in the region, especially in Djugu. The population needs to live in total tranquility, to live in security (…) ”he pleads.

Today will be final day that 141 Congolese pardoned in Kampala by Museveni will be repatriated in the DRC

141 Congolese nationals sentenced and detained in prison facilities in Uganda have been released following the grace measure signed by Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni.
According to the DRC embassy in Uganda and other info from our DESK, their repatriation to the DRC  is scheduled for two days, 9 to 10 June 2020 at the border posts of Busanza, Bunagana and  for the province of North Kivu and Goli, Wanseko and Ntoroko for Ituri province.
The presidential measure of grace is part of the follow-up of decisions and recommendations during the visit of the President of the Republic, Félix Tshisekedi to Uganda, in November 2019.
In April, 74 fishermen had also enjoyed freedom after presidential grace.
Yesterday,a handful of them were handed over to DRC authorities at bunagana.

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Armed men capture the largest oil field in libya

The oil field has been under the control of the Tobruk-based Libyan House of Representatives and forces of the Libyan National Army led by general Khalifa Haftar since February 2019, but restarted extraction activities only recently.
The Libyan National Oil Corporation has stated that its El Sharara oil field was captured earlier in the day by a group of armed men led by "so-called brigadier general, Mohammed Khalifa", who claims to be the "guard" of the country's southern oil facilities. It's unclear which armed group "Mohammed Khalifa" represents, but Tuareg and Toubou militias exercise control over the territories adjacent to the oil-field.
"[Armed men] asked the field manager to stop maintenance operations, unconcerned with the dire consequences act for the facility's equipment, which may cost the Libyan state and its partners money, time, and efforts, as well as to thwart the efforts to restore oil extraction to earlier levels", the statement said.
The National Oil Corporation said it ordered employees on site not to follow any orders from the armed men regarding the oil field's operation, saying it will be notifying the Office of the Attorney General, Interpol, and the UN of the situation, requesting assistance.
The oil field has been under the control of the Libyan National Army led by General Khalifa Haftar since February 2019 but started to resume its operations only days ago. The facility faced technical difficulties in restarting operations due to a long pause in its usage and decided to run maintenance to root the problems out. The NOC planned that in three months the El Sharara oil field, the biggest in the country, would be producing 30,000 barrels per day supported by western countries supported the ouster its long-time leader Muammar Gaddafi. The Tobruk-based Libyan House of Representatives supported by the LNA controls a significant part of the country's east and north-east, while the UN-supported Government of National Accord controls the capital of Tripoli and the country's northwest. Tuareg and Toubou militias control territories in Libya's southwest, including those surrounding the LNA-controlled swath of land where the El Sharara oil field is located.

A citizen of the Islamic Republic, who allegedly provided the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) with information about the whereabouts of the late top Iranian general , will be executed

On 3 January, a US drone strike, authorised by President Donald Trump, killed Qasem Soleimani and Shia militia commander Abu Mahdi Muhandis who both were in a car at the Baghdad International Airport.
Iran's judiciary spokesman has announced that a citizen of the Islamic Republic, who allegedly provided the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) with information about the whereabouts of the late top Iranian general , will be executed.
"Mahmoud Mousavi-Majd, one of the spies for CIA and [the Israeli intelligence service] Mossad has been sentenced to death. He gave the whereabouts of martyr [Qasem] Soleimani to our enemies”, Gholamhossein Esmaili told a televised news conference on Tuesday.
The statement comes after the magazine Newsweek quoted several unnamed sources as saying in late March that only a few people were in the know about the killing of Soleimani by a US MQ-9 Reaper drone in Iraq earlier this year.
According to the sources, Soleimani’s assassination was carried out in such secrecy that even the US military’s own spy satellites, the so-called “national technical means” (NTM), did not know about the drone’s position.
One of the sources claimed that there was “no GPS track on the MQ-9 Reaper as it made its way toward Baghdad International Airport, nor was there any indication of its flight provided to radar systems tasked with identifying friendly aircraft”.
Soleimani's Assassination
On 3 January, Soleimani, the head of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps' Quds Force, was killed at the Baghdad International Airport in a US drone strike ordered by President Donald Trump.
Soleimani’s assassination led to a major escalation of tensions between Tehran and Washington , with Iran officially responding by launching airstrikes against two Iraqi military bases housing US troops.
The strikes caused no deaths or serious injuries, but the Pentagon has since reported that at least 109 US servicemembers have been diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries.
Ain al-Asad air base was struck by a barrage of Iranian missiles on Wednesday, in retaliation for the U.S. drone strike that killed atop Iranian commander, Gen. Qassem Soleimani, whose killing raised fears of a wider war in the Middle East.
US-Iranian tensions have been in place since Trump announced Washington’s unilateral withdrawal from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, or
the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) , also reinstating harsh economic sanctions against the Islamic Republic on 8 May 2018. Exactly a year later, Tehran declared that it had started suspending some of its JCPOA obligations.

NRA HEROES LT. COL. SERWANGA LWANGA. (RIP) R0/00053

Serwanga joined NRA in 1981 and while in the bush, he was nicknamed THE HORSE, because he would carry messages from the base camp and frontline and deliver them as fast as a horse or wind even through hostile communities.
When the former UNLA Commander, Gen. Tito Okello Lutwa became President after toppling President Milton Obote in the July 1985 coup, asked all rebel groups to join him. Even when all the other groups were willing to join the new government, NRA rebels refused the offer.
Lutwa then called for peace talks and NRA accepted. Nairobi, Kenya, was chosen as the venue.
Talks started on Aug.20- Dec 17,1985. However, rebels lacked information about these talks and there was so much propaganda, forexample, the rebels were told that their leader, President Museveni had agreed to a 50/50 share of posts with the government.
They therefore need authentic information and for his swiftness and intelligence, Serwanga was chosen for the deadly mission to Nairobi to get accurate information. Unfortunately, he was arrested at Busia boarder.
On December 17, 1985, a peace accord between the NRA rebels and the junta was signed. But Serwanga was still detained at the Nile Mansions, now Serena Hotel in Kampala.
In the second week of January 1986, a deal was concluded and Serwanga was handed over to the NRM external wing in Nairobi.
In the struggle, Serwanga served in many capacities and held many important appointments;
• Intelligence Officer
• Deputy Chief Political Commissar
• Acting Commanding Officer of the Task Force Black Bombers
• PPS
• Chief Political Commissar
He participated actively in the formation of Resistance Councils and Committees, and was part of the Constitutional Commission which sensitized the people.

.....,........................
I stand to be corrected
.........
For God and my Country 

Nearly 1,300 civilians have been killed in several separate conflicts involving armed groups and security forces in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the past eight months

Nearly 1,300 civilians have been killed in several separate conflicts involving armed groups and security forces in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the past eight months, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle said on Friday Bachelet. She added that some of the incidents involving massacres and other abuses and violations could constitute crimes against humanity or war crimes.
The number of victims has risen sharply in recent weeks as conflicts in three eastern provinces - Ituri, North Kivu and South Kivu - have spread with disastrous repercussions for the civilian population. Armed groups committed atrocities and massacres, and the security forces have also been responsible for serious human rights violations in these provinces as well as in other parts of the country.
"I am dismayed by the increase in brutal attacks against innocent civilians by armed groups, and by the reaction of the military and police who have also committed serious violations, including murder and sexual violence. These are not only wrongdoings, but they also break the trust between the people and the civil and military authorities, "said Bachelet.
In Ituri province, violence has spread to new areas as the number of armed groups has increased. The main armed group remains CODECO, composed mainly of combatants from the Lendu community, which broke out after its main leader, Ngudjolo Duduko Justin, was killed on March 25.
As documented in the UN human rights report released on January 10, 2020 and updated on May 27, CODECO and other Lendu fighters are pursuing a strategy of massacres of local residents - mainly Hema, but also Alur - since 2017, in order to control the natural resources in the region. Other groups, including the Ndo Okebo, Nyali and Mambisa, have been affected by the violence more recently.
"So far, and to their credit, the targeted communities have refrained from responding," said Ms. Bachelet, who visited Ituri in January and met with mutilated and displaced people in brutal attacks from CODECO. "However, without protection by effective security and defense forces, there is a serious risk that communities will feel compelled to form self-defense groups, which would most likely exacerbate an already dire situation."
The attacks and the nature of violence committed by armed groups have become increasingly atrocious, characterized in particular by sexual violence, beheadings and mutilation of corpses. According to the United Nations Joint Human Rights Office in the DRC (BCNUDH), between October 1, 2019 and May 31, 2020, at least 531 civilians were killed by armed groups in Ituri, including 375 since March, when violence has increased. The Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (FARDC) and the Congolese National Police (PNC) also reportedly killed 17 civilians during the same period.
In North Kivu, the launch of military operations by the security and defense forces in November 2019 gave rise to reprisals against the civilian population by the main armed group, the ADF, who killed on 31 May 2020 at least 514 civilians using machetes, axes and heavy weapons, abducted children and attacked schools and hospitals- (ADF combatants were also responsible for 77 civilian deaths in the neighboring Ituri). The defense and security forces were also heavily involved in the extrajudicial execution by the FARDC of 59 civilians and the PNC of 24 others. More than 400,000 people have been displaced in North Kivu.
FARDC operations have also allowed the ADFs to extend their influence into territories previously unaffected by the armed conflict. As in Ituri, there is a serious risk that Mai-Mai vigilantes will arise, with civilians once again caught in the middle.
"I call on the Congolese authorities to do everything in their power to establish state authority in these two conflict zones, including by deploying or expanding the presence of the security forces, and to ensure that they protect civilians rather than attack them, "said the High Commissioner. “The protection of civilians is the responsibility of the state and
when the state leaves a void, other actors tend to fill it. In the DRC, past experience shows that this can have catastrophic results. The widespread and systematic nature of some of the attacks against civilians in Ituri and North Kivu may constitute crimes against human beings humanity or war crimes, "she added.
In South Kivu, at least 74 people have been killed since October and at least 36 women and children raped in a resurgence of ethnic violence between the Banyamulenge communities and the Bafuliro, Babembe and Banyindu. More than 110,000 people, most of them women and children, have been displaced by the violence, which is fueled by hate speech on the media, social media and in public statements. FARDC soldiers have also been responsible for human rights violations, including the murder of at least 15 people and sexual violence against 13 women.
Serious violence and killings also took place in Kongo Central and Kinshasa where, between March 30 and April 24, at least 62 civilians were killed and 74 injured in seven operations by the PNC and FARDC against activists of the Bundu Dia Kongo politico-religious group (BDK).
BDK members organized demonstrations in violation of the law, barricaded roads, held hate speech, threatened to expel foreigners from Kongo Central, and allegedly physically attacked some of them. They also reacted violently against the security forces, killing one police officer and injuring nine others. However, the response of the security and defense forces has been clearly disproportionate, with the systematic use by police officers of live ammunition to disperse unarmed crowds. On April 22, in Songololo, Kongo Central, law enforcement officers attacked a house where 70 BDK supporters gathered, torched it, and fired and used machetes against those fleeing the fire. , killing 19 people, including a child. Two days later, in Kinshasa, police and the armed forces killed 31 other BDK supporters in an operation to arrest the group’s leader, Ne Muanda Nsemi.
"International standards on the use of force by the security forces * strike a clear balance between threat and response," said the High Commissioner. "Even during a state of emergency, the use of force must always be exceptional and based on the principles of legality, necessity and proportionality. The security forces should only use force when it is absolutely necessary, and lethal force can only be used when there is an imminent risk to life.
She stressed that the investigations which have been established must be credible, transparent and independent, recalling that the victims and their families have the right to justice, to the truth and to reparations and she urged the authorities to "take all measures necessary to prevent the recurrence of such serious violations. "

A boat drowned on lake Albert,16 washed away in the waves and 2 were saved

A case of drowning was reported at Lake Albert the night of Sunday to Monday, June 08, 2020 in the territory of Mahagi more than 110km north of the town Bunia in Ituri.
Local civil society who alerted the authorities reports that the victims were smuggled from Uganda to attend a mourning ceremony in a village called Gipa-Ramogi located in the chiefdom of Mukambu.
"There is a boat in Province from Uganda which was smuggled in with at least 18 people on board to witness a case of mourning. Upon their return, following the strong wind on the lake at night, their canoe capsized. 16 of them were washed away and 2 others were saved, ”explains Anican Tengo of the new civil society in Mahagi.
According to the same source, the victims are all Congolese living in Uganda, but who have entered illegally, without being registered by the competent services.
The movement of populations between the DRC and Uganda via Lake Albert shared by the two states has been suspended since the declaration of the Covid-19 pandemic on a decision by Congolese President Félix Tshisekedi.