Armed ViolenceNews

Congo Army Accused of Maltreating Local Civilians, Escalating Violence

Described as the “Jungle Battalion”, the soldiers sent as reinforcement to Opienge in January this year to fight the M23 were accused of being at the centre of the harassment of the Bafwasende locals in North Kivu.

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo) soldiers have been accused of exacerbating the growing insecurity in Opienge, Bafwasende territory, forcing approximately 80 per cent of the local population to flee their homes.

Civil society organisations and the administrator of the Bafwasende territory told journalists on Monday, March 10, that exactions against civilians have been on the rise since military reinforcements were sent to the area in January this year.

The civil society actors cited the case of a twenty-year-old man who was killed in cold blood by a soldier, claiming that “six bullets were fired into the body of the young man for no reason”.

Described as the “Jungle Battalion”, the soldiers sent as reinforcement to Opienge in January this year to fight the M23 were accused of being at the centre of the harassment of the Bafwasende locals in North Kivu.

“People have abandoned their houses and are hiding in the forest,” one of the civil society sources said. 

However, Willy Simbiye, the territory administrator, revealed that over 80 per cent of the population has been forced to flee for fear of the soldiers. “The soldiers have been provoking the population. They have mounted barriers everywhere?” he claimed.

According to Desire Aliene, an official of the civil society, “the population of Opienge has been trying to get to Bafwasende centre but there is no way because the soldiers have blocked the road.”

The territory administrator and civil society organisations have contacted the provincial authorities on the despicable behaviour of the soldiers, hoping that urgent measures would be taken to ensure a return to peace in Opienge.

Soldiers from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo), known as the "Jungle Battalion," have been accused of worsening insecurity in Opienge, Bafwasende territory. Since military reinforcements arrived in January, civil society organizations report a significant rise in civilian harassment, resulting in about 80% of the local population fleeing their homes.

Incidents include the cold-blooded killing of a young man by soldiers, with claims of road blockages hindering movement to the Bafwasende center. Local authorities and civil society have reached out to provincial leaders, urging prompt action to restore peace and address the soldiers' misconduct.


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Chief Bisong Etahoben

Chief Bisong Etahoben is a Cameroonian investigative journalist and traditional ruler. He writes for international media and has participated in several transnational investigations. Etahoben won the first-ever Cameroon Investigative Journalist Award in 1992. He serves as a member of a number of international investigative journalism professional bodies including the Forum for African Investigative Reporters (FAIR). He is HumAngle's Francophone and Central Africa editor.

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