Sunday, 1 July 2012

Kinshasa Vice: Eugène Diomi Ndongala, Tshisekedi's presumptive Prime Minister, a fugitive from justice for alleged statutory rapes of 2 sisters

Former presidential candidate (2006) and Kinshasa MP Eugène Diomi

Ndongala (photo above), leader of the small party Christian Democracy

(DC) and one of the staunchest supporters of self-proclaimed president

Tshisekedi, was declared a fugitive from justice by DRC Attorney

General Flory Kabange Numbi at a press conference Thursday, June 28.





According to Kabange and to the father of the two minor girls

appearing by the their dad's side with blurred faces on prime time

national television on the same Thursday, Diomi Ndongala is alleged to

have committed statutory rape on both underage girls in the night of

Monday, June 25.





In its initial report on the sex scandal embroiling the opposition

leader, Radio Okapi quotes AG Kabange remarking that, "It appears from

a quick [police] interrogation that it wasn't the first time [the

sisters] had criminal sexual relations with Diomi Ndongala. [His]

bodyguard and his security guard have confirmed the facts, saying that

MP Diomi Ndongala was present on the scene with those girls. Crime

scene investigation police have seized evidence, including

sex-enhancing drugs, the condoms used, and pornographic CDs--as well

as telephone records of calls placed by Diomi to those two girls."





The crime scene described by Kabange is eerily reminiscent of the

crime scene Kinshasa police had initially claimed to have found in the

car and by the body of human rights activist Floribert "Flori"

Chebeya, apparently assassinated in by rogue cops in June 2010--though

the family of the deceased, human rights groups and a recent

documentary claim it was "state crime." The case is now being retried

on appeal.





This uncanny resemblance is now being repeated ad nauseum by Diomi

Ndongala's party and other opposition leaders in the media

damage-control campaign they've launched as soon as news of the

scandal hit the airwaves.





Opposition leaders brushed off the rape charges as a "cabal" and a

"frame-up" at their press conference of Saturday, June

30--coincidentally DRC Independence Day, which was marked without

festivities countrywide, in solidarity with Congolese citizens of the

war-stricken Kivu provinces.





AG Kabange is urging Diomi to come out of hiding and to surrender to

authorities.





But Freddy Kita, Secretary General of the Christian Democracy, in a

statement posted on that party's website, is accusing Colonel Célestin

Kanyama aka "esprit de mort" [spirit of death]-- commander of the

eastern Kinshasa police area of Lukunga--of abducting Diomi in the

evening of Wednesday, June 27.





Colonel Kanyama is reported to have led a 40-strong police squad into

the premises of CD party to search Diomi's offices for evidence of the

alleged crime on Tuesday.





In a subsequent report, citing one source close to the investigation,

Radio Okapi reported that the alleged crimes started more than a week

ago.





In the first encounter, Diomi is alleged to have talked the two

underage sisters into entering his party's office where he offered

them drinks laced with rape drugs and then raped them.





During the second encounter that took place in the evening of Monday,

June 25, Diomi is once again alleged to have raped the two sisters.





The following morning, the father of the two underage girls noticed

that his daughters showed signs of physical malaise.





He confronted them and found a large sum of money in their hand bags.

At which point the two sisters then broke down and "confessed" to

their dad, who then reported the alleged crime to the police.





As of this writing, Diomi is still wanted by the police, whereas the

opposition claims he's in police custody and are warning the public

and human rights groups that there might be foul play afoot.





The opposition charges that the regime wants to silence Diomi, its

uncompromising regime, for the following reasons:





1) Though an MP-elect of the Funa constituency of Kinshasa, Diomi has

vowed never to take his seat in the current National Assembly as long

as Tshisekedi has not been recognized as the real winner of the

November 2011 presidential election. He also barred the two other

members of his party elected last November from taking their seats in

Parliament.





2) Diomi launched in February the political platform called "Popular

Presidential Majority" (MPP)--a parody of Kabila's Presidential

Majority (MP)--that is supposed to fight "to restore the truth" of the

November 2011 elections.





3) In April, Diomi was rumored to be the presumptive Prime Minister

Etienne Tshisekedi was poised to appoint any time.





4) Diomi achieved a real coup on Friday, June 28, when he had

Tshisekedi and his wife Maman Marthe come out of seclusion to attend

the mass for peace in eastern DRC celebrated at the Catholic

Cathédrale Notre-Dame du Congo, in the Lingwala Commune of Kinshasa.





Well, maybe those impunity-inclined Congolese politicos should try

laying out face to face their irrefutable arguments of the frame-up by

the regime to the outraged father who is convinced that his two

underage girls had fallen prey to a maniacal sexual predator and

pedophile.



***



PHOTO CREDITS: John Bompengo/Radio Okapi

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