Tag: Congolese

  • Congolese journalist jailed for insulting governor

    A reporter named Steeve Mwanyo Iwewe, who works with the privately owned broadcaster Radio Television Sarah, was convicted on March 1 in the Mbandaka criminal court on a charge of insulting Équateur Governor Bobo Boloko Bolumbu.

    According to a statement signed by Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and distributed by APO Group noted that authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo should not oppose journalist Iwewe’s appeal of a year-long prison sentence for insulting a provincial governor, the Committee to Protect Journalists said on Friday.

    According to Souverain Pontife Ikolombe, the journalist’s lawyer, who spoke with CPJ. Iwewe was sentenced to one year in prison and instructed to pay $200 in damages to Bolumbu, his lawyer said; Iwewe is currently in Mbandaka central prison, where he has been detained since his arrest on February 27.

    Ikolombe told CPJ that he will appeal the judgment tomorrow at the Tribunal de Paix de Mbandaka appeals court, alleging that the original trial was improperly held.

    Iwewe is the first journalist CPJ is aware of having been imprisoned in the country since president Félix Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo took office on January 24.

    READ ALSO: Congolese singer, Koffi Olomide reportedly gets 18-month jail term

    Responding to the situation, CPJ’s Africa program coordinator, Angela Quintal said that the Democratic Republic of Congo may have a new president, but it seems the ambition to censor journalists whom the authorities find undesirable is unchanged, “Governor Bolumbu should not contest Iwewe’s appeal, so his conviction can be overturned and he can be released,” she said.

    Iwewe was arrested and beaten by the governor’s security agents on February 27 in Mbandaka while covering Bolumbu’s arrival at a protest against an increase in state taxes, according to his lawyer.

    Security officers told Iwewe to stop filming and taking photographs, but the journalist refused, Ikolombe told CPJ.

    “You came here to do your work, let me also do mine freely,” Iwewe told the officers when they told him to stop reporting, according to local press freedom group Journaliste en Danger. The governor then ordered Iwewe’s arrest for insulting him, Ikolombe told CPJ.

    CPJ’s repeated calls and WhatsApp messages to Bolumbu spokesperson Rossi Bolekwa went unanswered. CPJ also called Trésor Nsaebeinga, the director of Radio Television Sarah, but did not get a response.

    The lawyer said that Nsaebeinga and Yanick Mbombo, another reporter at the station, had gone into hiding for fear of arrest following Iwewe’s detention.

  • Congo, WHO race to prevent runaway Ebola outbreak

    Congolese and United Nations officials were racing on Thursday to prevent a runaway Ebola outbreak in Congo.

    They are working out the logistics of keeping newly a vaccines well below freezing in a steamy region on the equator with unreliable power.

    World Health Organisation (WHO) spokesman Christian Lindmeier said the U.N. body would convene an Emergency Committee meeting on Friday to consider the international risks.

    This is Democratic Republic of Congo’s ninth epidemic since the disease was identified in the 1970s.

    However, this outbreak I’d its most alarming because of the risk of transmission via regular river transport to the capital Kinshasa, a city of 10 million.

    There have already been 44 suspected, probable or confirmed cases of Ebola, and 23 people have died.

    Read Also:Ebola outbreak spreads to DR Congo city

    Potentially, most worrying is a confirmed case in Mbandaka, a city of about 1 million connected to Kinshasa by the Congo River.

    “This does change the way we need to respond,” Peter Salama, WHO’s medical emergency programme head told the media in Geneva.

    “Overnight, Mbandaka has become the number one priority for preventing this outbreak from getting out of control.”

    The other Ebola cases were spread across sites in remote areas where the disease might not travel quickly.

    An experimental but highly effective vaccine is being deployed, with health workers being vaccinated first.

    But it normally needs to be kept 80 degrees Celsius below freezing in a humid region where daytime temperatures hover around 30.

    “For now, the cold chain is guaranteed at – 80 degrees until Kinshasa,” Health Minister Oly Ilunga told Reuters.

    “There is a fridge that will be prepared (on Thursday) … in Mbandaka and that will be at -80.”

    “This vaccine is no longer experimental. The effectiveness has been proven and validated,” he added.

    “Now that we are facing the Ebola virus we must use all the resources we have.”

    WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told the media that the vaccine can still be effective for up to two weeks if stored in a fridge at between 8 and 2 degrees above freezing.

    To avoid criticism received during the huge former Ebola outbreak, which killed 11,300 people in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia from 2014 to 2016, WHO is moving fast on Congo’s latest outbreak.

    The emergency committee will decide whether to declare a “public health emergency of international concern”, which would mean getting access to more resources, Lindmeier said.

    The Kinshasa government reported the outbreak on May 8, one day after two samples tested positive.

    Within days the WHO was sending experts, preparing a helicopter “air bridge” to the site, and planning a vaccination campaign.

    The nightmare scenario is an outbreak in Kinshasa, a crowded city where millions live in unsanitary slums not connected to a sewer system.

    Several public transport boats a day head from Mbandaka downstream over the river to the capital.

    They are so overloaded with people that they sometimes topple over, their toilets are usually filthy and water for washing absent.

    “If this Ebola outbreak ever reaches Kinshasa, what we are going to see is death here,” Jean Marie Mukaya, a resident of the city, told media.

    “Because it is very dirty here. The government and the population must … get rid of all the dirt.”

    Already the WHO has warned that there is a “moderate” regional risk because the disease could travel along the river to Central African Republic and Congo Republic.

    But it has said the global risk is low because of the remoteness of the area and the rapid response launched so far.

    Even if the logistics of the ‘fridge bridge’ prove easy enough to overcome, “the vaccine is not a magic bullet,” Salama told Reuters this week, especially since health workers have been infected.

    “Having healthcare workers infected is usually a ‘canary in the mine’ for potential amplification,” he said.

  • UN accuses Congo forces of targeting officials during deadly protests

    UN accuses Congo forces of targeting officials during deadly protests

    UN on Tuesday accused Congolese security agents of targeting its  during a violence that broke out during a protest on Sunday, Spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani told a briefing in Geneva on Tuesday.

    Congolese security forces shot dead six people and wounded dozens more as they fired tear gas to disperse a protest in Kinshasa against President Joseph Kabila.

    Shamdasani said that 68 people were wounded and 121 arrested, and the UN had information about “a number of other killings” in protests elsewhere in the country.

    “One of those injured was a UN human rights monitor who was punched and kicked by security forces, in spite of wearing a blue UN vest with a human rights logo.

    “He is also working under the long-established UN mandate to observe demonstrations.

    “He was in the right place at the right time. He was there to monitor the protests and the conduct of the security forces in the context of the protests,” she said.

    She said after he was beaten up, the UN team came back to monitor the protest but military police fired tear gas to stop them doing their work.

    “They were targeted. “This is the UN we are talking about.

    “If security forces are going to be so brazen as to even attack the UN, then we are very concerned about the way they are going to be treating other protesters,” Shamdasani said.

    She said that the UN mission in Congo was taking up the incident with the authorities, and wanted an investigation into the killings.

    Read Also: Iran protests: Russia berates US for UN talks on ‘internal affair’

    “It is not our hope that they will investigate, it’s their obligation to investigate. It is the obligation of the government to ensure that security forces are handling protests in line with the law.”

    A Congo government spokesman was not immediately reachable to comment.

    Another UN official had said that Kabila’s refusal to step down at the end of his mandate in December 2016 has triggered a series of street protests.

    He said that has also emboldened armed rebel groups, who are starting to coalesce in opposition.

    Shamdasani said Internet and SMS services had been suspended since on Saturday night, and tear gas was fired into and around churches in Kinshasa, Goma, Kisangani, Lubumbashi and Bukavu.

    She said there were heavy deployments of security forces around places of worship in Mbandaka, Beni, Mbuji-Mayi and Butembo.

    “The Catholic church is rallying people, mobilising people to stand up for their rights.

    “This is why you’ve seen that there are attacks against churches, tear gas being fired into churches, and people prevented from going in and in some cases prevented from coming out of churches after services.”

    NAN

  • Police arrest 2 Congolese over illegal ivory trade

    Police arrest 2 Congolese over illegal ivory trade

    Ugandan police on Tuesday said they were holding two Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) nationals after seizing 43kg of illegal ivory from them.

    Josephine Angucia, West Nile police spokesperson, told Xinhua by telephone that the police flying squad, acting on intelligence reports, arrested Chaku Ndabah and James Aniku as they planned to sell 43 kg of ivory to Marachain, the northwestern Ugandan district.

    She said the two suspects would be arraigned in court on charges of unlawful possession of protected species and conspiracy to commit a felony.

    The offence is punishable by not more than five years in prison or a fine not less than the value of the wildlife product involved.

    Ugandan police in August arrested seven traffickers in the western district of Rukungiri for illegal possession of 33.3kilogramme of elephant tusks and 73.7 kilogramme of hippo teeth.

    Most of the ivory in Uganda is imported from the neighboring countries such as Tanzania and the DRC.

    Uganda is mainly used as a transit point for smugglers of wildlife products as the offenders take advantage of porous borders in Africa’s Great Lakes region to move illegal wildlife products around.

    Read Also: Police arrest ‘killers’ of APC stalwart in Festac

  • Congolese humiliate Nigerians; chant Ebola go away

    Congolese humiliate Nigerians; chant Ebola go away

    • Police stop contingent from watching Friday training session

    Nigerians living in Congo Brazzaville would be subjected to negative reactions from the indigenes if the Super Eagles beat the Red Devil in today’s make or mar 2015 Africa Cup of Nations qualifying match.

    Not only that the visiting Nigerian delegation led by the Nigeria Football Federation President Amaju Pinnick are also in for a very negative reception from fans and the security agencies in Congo today as the Eagles  take on the Congo Brazzaville for the maximum three point at stake.

    A dose of what to expect if Nigeria beat Congo Brazzaville today was extended to Nigerian Journalists and Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) team led by Friday Nwankwo  Kujah, some members of Nigeria Supporters Club and Nigerian fans in Congo were denied access to watch the Eagles training held 3.30pm yesterday.

    The fans rained abuses and tagged Nigerians Ebola people, singing “Ebola (effected people) go away from us”.

    The journalists, TAN team and Nigeria’s Supporters Club members had to run inside the Coastal Bus that brought them to the Stade Ominisport Stadium and begged the driver to leave the stadium before Congo fans attack them.

    What even amazed the Nigerian journalists covering the match was the way security men were listening to fans instructions not to allow the visiting Nigerians to enter the Stade Ominisport Stadium.  The main  gate of the Stadium was locked and any attempt by journalists, TAN members and Supporters Club led by their President General, Dr Rafiu Ladipo to enter was rebuffed by fans and the security men on ground.

    Meanwhile the Eagles have assured that nothing would distract them from getting the needed victory in today’s match.

    The Team Coordinator, Emmanuel Attah told NationSport that the players were resolute and very determined to beat Congo Brazzaville since that is the only way they can actualize Nigeria’s dream of playing in the finals of the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations.

    “The players are experienced to be bothered by the antics and undue threats from host fans. They have vowed to concentrate on the task to be done on the field of play not outside it. By the special grace of God we will come out smiling after tomorrow’s (Saturday’s) match’, Attah assured.

    Congo Brazzaville fans who also like Nigerian fans kept vigil at the Airport expressed optimisms of beating the African Champions, Nigeria as they points five fingers to players and officials emerging from the Discovery Air that conveyed the Nigerian team to the Augustoneto Airport which means that they are expecting their team to beat Nigeria 5-0”.

  • Congolese, comedian caught with cocaine

    Congolese, comedian caught with cocaine

    A Ghanaian comedian and another foreigner, have been allegedly caught with cocaine by operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA). While the 54-year-old comedian, Musah Iddrisu, was allegedly arrested at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport (AIIA), Enugu, Enugu State capital, with 1.500kilogrammes of heroin, the other suspect, Ihana Cedrick from Democratic Republic of Congo, was “caught” with 450 grammes of cocaine.

    The agency’s Head of Public Affairs, Mitchel Ofoyeju, said Iddrisu a.k.a Charles Udunehi, who allegedly bought the drugs for 19,000 US dollars, was on his way out of the country when he was arrested. Cedrick, 24, Ofoyeju said, claimed to be a secondary school pupil in Tanzania.

    The NDLEA spokesman added: “The Ghanaian comedian ingested 450 grammes of cocaine on his way to Thailand, while the student from Congo DRC imported 1.500kg of heroin into the country. We have also apprehended a Nigerian, John Obi Nwadilichukwu, who was to receive the student, collect the drug and pay him for smuggling the drug.”

    He said the drug was hidden inside a luggage and was detected during inward screening of passengers on an Ethiopian airline flight, adding that upon interrogation, Ihiana revealed that he was given the drug by a Nigerian woman at Nairobi for delivery to her husband in Enugu.

    Iddrisu, said: “I got involved in drug trafficking because of my financial predicament. I bought the drugs in Ghana, ingested it and came to Enugu airport, thinking that the security would not be like those at other airports since it is new. I regret my action.”

    Chairman/Chief Executive of the NDLEA, Ahmadu Giade, praised his men for the arrests, adding that the suspects would soon be charged to court.