Sunday, 7 October 2012

Goma: DRC Murder Capital

(PHOTO 1: A police line at the scene where a captain of the Republican

Presidential Guard and two other people were murdered September 25)



(PHOTO 2: The Goma cityhall mortuary services hearse is busy these

days picking up bodies from crime scenes. Here, it's picking up the

body of an alleged bandit lynched by a neighborhood posse on Tuesday,

October 2)



***



Blogger-journo Charly Kasereka and France24 news channel reporter

Ségolène Malterre write that murder rate has soared in Goma, the

besieged provincial capital of North Kivu Province.



A murder rate that could soon prove unsustainable if this dangerous

trend continues in a city of around 400,000 inhabitants.



With M-23 positions at about a mere 30 km north of the city, Goma

denizens, including city and provincial senior officials, are now

prone to the obsessive fear of infiltration by the insurgents who are

blamed for those daily multiple murders.



(The provincial security minister called the murders acts of "urban

terrorism," whereas FARDC North-Kivu spokesman Col. Olovier Amuli

attributed them to "traditional banditry.")



The accusation of infiltration was rejected by M-23 who, on Monday,

October 1, threatened to "seize Goma to save the population."



MONUSCO quickly countered this threat by stating that it was an empty

threat since the military operation it has set up around the city

makes it impregnable.



Charly Kasereka, who's keeping the grim tally, says:



"From September 23 [to October 2], I've counted 15 people slain.



"Besides, lots of residents are being mugged and then have to live

with the trauma of the mugging. [...]



"In one neighborhood, it's a captain of the Republican [Presidential]

Guard who is killed in a hail of bullets while having a beer; in

another, a man has his motorcycle seized and he's then beaten up.



"The situation is such that on September 26 a special security

meeting was held at the governorate, but that very same night it was

the lieutenant-governor's house that was taken as a target practice,

sustaining gunshots and grenade blasts.



"Just yesterday, a colleague journalist who went for a walk after

nightfall was mugged.



"Personally, I no longer go out after 6 p.m., for that's the time when

armed gangs start fanning out through the streets."



Charly Kasereka and Ségolène Malterre end their report with this piece

of chilling news:



"Being poorly paid, some [FARDC] soldiers don't think twice about

selling their weapons to bandits [...]"



***



SOURCES:



(actudukivu.blogspot.com/2012/10/sous-la-menace-des-rebelles-la-ville-de.html?m=1)



and



(observers.france24.com/fr/content/20121002-alors-rebelles-sont-portes-goma-ville-sombre-violence-nord-kivu-guerre-m23-criminalite)



***

Crédits Photo: Charly Kasereka

Via: actudukivu.blogspot

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