Death Toll In Suspected ADF Attacks In East DR Congo Hits 16

Rebels have killed no fewer than 15 civilians and one army captain following recent attacks on villages in eastern DR Congo’s Ituri province, a military officer disclosed on Sunday, raising an earlier reported death toll of 10.

According to Ituri’s military governor, Colonel Siro Simba, suspected rebels from the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) had also killed about 10 people in the village of Kandoyi last Friday night.

Another attack on Saturday in the nearby village of Bandiboli killed five civilians, he added, according to a recording of his address to a funeral ceremony for the villagers.

One army captain and one ADF fighter were also killed in clashes, Simba revealed, without providing further details.

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The latest death toll marks an increase on an earlier reported figure of nine civilians killed in Kandoyi and one in Bandiboli.

Africa Today News, New York gathered that recent days have been particularly bloody in Ituri, where armed groups have killed at least 37 civilians since Friday.

A separate attack conducted by the ethnically based Zaire militia killed 22 civilians elsewhere in the conflict-torn province on Friday, according to the Democratic Republic of Congo’s army.

Over 120 militias roam the country’s mineral-rich but volatile east, where militia attacks on civilians are routine.

The ADF — which the Islamic State group claims as its Central African offshoot — is among the most violent militias.

It has been accused of massacring Congolese civilians as well as staging attacks in neighbouring Uganda.

In late November, Ugandan troops joined DR Congo’s army in an operation against the ADF, following bomb attacks in the Ugandan capital Kampala that were blamed on the group.

Last year, the DRC’s government also placed members of the security forces in charge of Ituri and neighbouring North Kivu province in a bid to stem the violence.

Attacks have continued, however.

Africa Today News, New York

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