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1,334 killed in DR Congo violence: UN

Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (FARDC) soldiers take their position following renewed fighting near the Congolese border with Rwanda, outside Goma in the North Kivu province of the Democratic Republic of Congo on May 28, 2022.
Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (FARDC) soldiers take their position following renewed fighting near the Congolese border with Rwanda, outside Goma in the North Kivu province of the Democratic Republic of Congo on May 28, 2022.

AFP :
The UN rights chief decried on Thursday surging violence in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, with rampant sexual violence and more than 1,300 people, including over 100 children, killed since October.
Rebel militias have plagued the DR Congo for decades, and Volker Turk warned the United Nations Human Rights Council that “armed violence has intensified in eastern provinces, notably in Ituri and North Kivu.”
The Allied Democratic Forces, a notorious militia called CODECO, and M23 insurgents, along with the Zaire and Nyatura armed groups, were continuing to “perpetrate despicable attacks against the civilian population with complete impunity,” he said.
“Since October 2022, at least 1,334 people, including 107 children, have been killed in these eastern provinces,” the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said.
Presenting the council with an update on the situation, Turk lamented that the violence had displaced some six million people inside the DRC, marking the highest number of internally displaced people in Africa.
He warned that areas that until now have generally been spared, including the western provinces of Mai-Ndombe and Kwilu, had begun seeing outbreaks of violence.
Turk also condemned continued widespread “vicious sexual violence,” which he pointed out had historically been “used in the DRC as a deliberate weapon of war and strategy of terror.”
In 2022 alone, he said the UN had “documented and verified cases of conflict-related sexual violence against 701 victims, including 503 women, 11 men and 187 girls.”