DRC mourns 35 displaced people killed in attack

Wednesday, May 15, 2024
Bombs struck huts in the Mugunga camp for displaced people on the outskirts of DRC's Goma city on May 3, 2024. / Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse
3 Min Read

Summary:

  • A burial service has been held for 35 people who were killed in an air strike in eastern DRC on May 3.

Mourners gathered Wednesday for the funerals of victims of an attack on a camp for internally displaced people in eastern DR Congo which the government has called a “war crime.”

The funerals were held in Goma, the main city in North Kivu province, which has been plagued by fighting between M23 (March 23 Movement) rebels and the Congolese armed forces.

The mainly Tutsi-led M23 resumed its armed campaign in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2021 and has seized swathes of territory.

Thirty-five coffins were lined up for the ceremony at Goma’s largest stadium, AFP journa lists saw.

M23 accused of deadly attack

Burials later took place in Kibati, around 10 kilometres (six miles) north of the provincial capital, in a special cemetery for victims of conflict.

On May 3, bombs struck huts in the Mugunga camp for displaced people on the outskirts of Goma.

Humanitarian sources and an official from the camp put the death toll at 15, but a government minister said 35 people had died and 37 were injured.

The DRC and the United States have accused the M23 of being behind the attack on the camps, whose residents had been driven out of their villages by an M23 offensive.

Children were the most victims

“Twenty two of those (killed) were children… they were killed,” Patrick Muyaya, government spokespeman and minister for media and communications, said on X.

Muyaya, who attended the funerals on Wednesday, had previously called the blasts a “war crime.” The DRC government has also condemned the bombing as an “act of terrorism.”

Espoir Bwesha, 23, said he lost his 19-year-old brother David in the blasts.

David had been “resting inside his hut when a bomb fell on him”, Bwesha told AFP ahead of the ceremony.

Peace

“I want the enemy to be driven out and for peace to return,” he said, adding he did not want any more “heavy weapons” to be placed near camps for displaced people.

Denise Baleye said her younger sister’s two children aged four and 21 had been killed in the blasts.

“May the government help us to return to our villages,” she implored.

On May 7, the conflict also hit neighbouring South Kivu province when a bombing, blamed on the M23, killed seven people.

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Agence France-Presse is a French international news agency headquartered in Paris, France. Founded in 1835 as Havas, it is the world's oldest news agency. With 2,400 employees of 100 different nationalities, AFP has an editorial presence in 260 cities across 151 countries.
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