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Ethnic militia kills 10 at DR Congo displaced persons camp

Greenwatch Desk World News 2025-06-28, 10:12am

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An armed group at the centre of a long-running ethnic conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo's northeast attacked a camp for displaced people on Friday, killing 10, local sources told AFP.


Bordering Uganda, Ituri province has for years been the scene of pitched battles between the Lendu, a group mainly made up of settled farmers, and the Hema people, typically nomadic herders.

The fighting has led to the deaths of thousands of civilians and the mass displacement of many more.

Friday's assault on the Djangi displaced persons camp was carried out by the self-proclaimed Cooperative for the Development of Congo (Codeco), a Lendu-aligned militia responsible for previous civilian massacres, the camp's head told AFP.

"They were many and armed with firearms and machetes. They surprised us, they killed 10 displaced people, most of them women and children," said Richard Likana.

An employee of the Red Cross, who asked to remain anonymous, confirmed the attack, which took place around 60 kilometres (37 miles) from Bunia.

"They were cut up with machetes while others were shot," the humanitarian worker added.

Congolese army Colonel Ruffin Mapela, the local administrator for Djugu territory where the camp is located, gave the same toll of 10 dead and put the number of injured at 15.

According to local and humanitarian sources, Codeco was responsible for an attack on February 10 which killed 51 people in Ituri province. Most of the victims were also displaced persons.

That raid was said to be a response to a strike by the rival Hema-led Zaire militia in the same area.

Violence between the Hema and Lendu killed thousands in gold-rich Ituri from 1999-2003, which only ended after European forces intervened, reports BSS. 

The conflict erupted again in 2017, killing thousands more.

The violence has led to more than 1.5 million leaving their homes, according to the UN.