Tag: Democratic Republic of the Congo

  • Gunfire heard in DRC’s biggest prison after attempted jail break

    Gunfire heard in DRC’s biggest prison after attempted jail break

    Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) government has commenced inquiries after an attempted jailbreak overnight from the country’s biggest prison.

    Heavy gunfire rang out early yesterday morning from Makala central prison in the capital, Kinshasa, as inmates tried to break out from the overcrowded facility, authorities said.

    Government spokesman Patrick Muyaya confirmed on X that there was an “an attempted escape”, adding that security forces now had the situation under control.

    Reporting from Goma, Al Jazeera stated that at least two people were killed in the incident.

    “However, the pictures coming from the central jail of Makala show what local media already calls a carnage, but we cannot confirm the number of causalities,” the TV station said.

    Read Also: Jail break imminent in Ondo, says Akeredolu

    Local media reports said dozens of bodies were taken away from the prison.

    Daddi Soso, an electrician in his 40s who lives in the area, told the AFP news agency that he woke up during the night to the sound of gunfire.

    “There were gunshots from 1 or 2am in the morning, and until around 5am,” Soso said, visibly shaken.

    “There were deaths and there are people who fled,” he said, adding he saw law enforcement vehicles transporting bodies.

    Makala prison, whose capacity is for 1,500 prisoners, holds between 14,000 and 15,000 detainees, according to official figures.

  • US places travel ban on Congo’s officials over electoral fraud

    The United States has placed travel ban on some top government officials of the Democratic Republic of the Congo over their roles in alleged electoral fraud in the December 2018 general election in the country.

    The U.S. Department of State announced this in a statement entitled: ‘Public Designation of, and Visa Restrictions Placed on, Multiple Officials of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Due to Involvement in Significant Corruption, Human Rights Violations or Abuses, or Undermining of Democracy’.

    The statement read: “The United States stands with the people of the Democratic Republic of Congo (D.R.C.) following that country’s historic transfer of power.

    “The elections reflect the desire of the people of the D.R.C. for change and accountable government institutions.

    “However, there are legitimate concerns over the conduct and transparency of the electoral process.

    “The Secretary of State is publicly designating, due to their involvement in significant corruption relating to the electoral process, the following individuals: Mr. Corneille Nangaa, President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (D.R.C.) National Independent Electoral Commission (CENI); Mr. Norbert Basengezi Katintima, Vice President of CENI; Mr. Marcellin Mukolo Basengezi, Advisor to the President of CENI; Mr. Aubin Minaku Ndjalandjoko, President of the D.R.C.’s National Assembly; and Mr. Benoit Lwamba Bindu, President of the D.R.C.’s Constitutional Court.

    “This public designation is being made under Section 7031(c) of the Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations Act of 2019, (Div. F, P.L. 116-6-).

    “Section 7031(c) provides that, in cases where the Secretary of State has credible information that officials of foreign governments have been involved in significant corruption or a gross violation of human rights, those individuals and their immediate family members are ineligible for entry into the United States.

    “The Secretary of State is also imposing visa restrictions on election officials as well as military and government officials believed to be responsible for, complicit in, or to have engaged in human rights violations or abuses or undermining of the democratic process in the D.R.C.

    “These individuals enriched themselves through corruption, or directed or oversaw violence against people exercising their rights of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression.

    “They operated with impunity at the expense of the Congolese people and showed a blatant disregard for democratic principles and human rights.

    “The Department of State emphasizes that the actions announced today are specific to certain officials and not directed at the Congolese people or the newly elected government.

    “This decision reflects the Department of State’s commitment to working with the new D.R.C. government to realise its expressed commitment to end corruption and strengthen democracy and accountability, and respect for human rights.”

    CENI had announced on January 10 that opposition leader Felix Tshisekedi had provisionally won with 38.57 per cent of the vote against closest rival Martin Fayulu’s 34.8 per cent

    However, Fayulu, who had previously described the outcome as an “electoral coup” forged by Tshisekedi and long-term leader, former President Joseph Kabila, immediately called on the international community to reject the results.

    Announcing the final results of the much-delayed poll, the country’s Constitutional Court affirmed that Tshisekedi had won by a simple majority, which paved the way for him to take over from Kabila. (NAN)

     

  • DRC begins vaccination against latest Ebola outbreak

    The vaccination has targeted high risk populations in North Kivu, in which the provincial health minister and the provincial coordinator of the Expanded Program on Immunization were the first to be vaccinated.

    They were followed by first line health workers from the Mangina health center, 30 km from the town of Beni, who had been in contact with people who were confirmed cases of Ebola.

    Read Also: Gabisiu Ayodele Williams: Gentleman, good man

    “Vaccines are an important tool in the fight against Ebola. This is why it has been a priority to move them rapidly into place to begin protecting our health workers and the affected population,” said DRC Health Minister Dr. Oly Ilunga.

    A total of 3,220 doses of rVSV-ZEBOV Ebola vaccine are currently available in the country, while supplementary doses have been requested.

    While the vaccine goes through the licensing process, an agreement between Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, and Merck, the developer of the vaccine, ensures that additional investigational doses of the vaccine are available.

    The vaccination operation was launched just one week after the announcement of a second outbreak of Ebola this year in the country, in which a total of 44 cases have been reported so far as of Wednesday, including 17 confirmed and 27 probable.

    The death toll has risen to 36.

    Earlier on Tuesday, Peter Salama, deputy director-general of emergency preparedness and response at the WHO, said on Twitter that results of genetic analysis had confirmed Ebola Zaire strain was the cause of the latest outbreak in the DRC.

    The WHO, he said, is providing logistical support for the establishment of the cold chain and sending supplies needed for the vaccinations, in addition to supporting the negotiation of protocols with the manufacturer and national authorities.

    He said that the WHO was also supporting the deployment of vaccination experts from Guinea to work alongside national staff, who began the vaccination.

    However, North Kivu province and eastern areas of the adjacent Ituri province are among the most populated in the DRC, with many major cities, which brings heightened risks and new challenges in the fight against Ebola, according to Dr. Salama, who has called for fighting the outbreak with all tools, old and new.

  • Super Eagles drop nine places in FIFA ranking

    Super Eagles drop nine places in FIFA ranking

    By Moses Emorinken

    In spite of the Super Eagles sterling performance in the World Cup qualifiers and its convincing defeat of Argentina – one of the world’s finest teams, Nigeria has dropped nine (9) places in the latest football ranking by the International Federation of Association Football ( FIFA ).

    FIFA made this latest ranking known on Thursday, putting Nigeria at 50th position in the world and 8th in Africa.

    Read also: Nigeria moves up in latest FIFA Ranking

    It can be recalled that Nigeria occupied the 41st position in the last ranking. This did not augur well for the die-hard fans of the Super Eagles as they expected the recent exploits of the team to have levitated the Eagles to more desirable position in the upward direction.

    A few unexpected teams like Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the Congo etc., ranked higher than Nigeria.

    However, we are very hopeful that the forthcoming ranking by FIFA scheduled for 21st December, 2017 should hold more serendipitous prospects for our national team.

    See below the list of the top ten (10) teams in Africa and the world:

    Africa

    1. Senegal
    2. Tunisia
    3. Egypt
    4. Congo DR
    5. Morocco
    6. Burkina Faso
    7. Cameroon
    8. Nigeria
    9. Ghana
    10. Côte d’Ivoire

     

    World

    1. Germany
    2. Brazil
    3. Portugal
    4. Argentina
    5. Belgium
    6. Spain
    7. Poland
    8. Switzerland
    9. France
    10. Chile
  • ‘We can’t forget the anguish of Boko Haram victims’ – UK

    ‘We can’t forget the anguish of Boko Haram victims’ – UK

    The United Kingdom has said that it was difficult to forget the stories of anguish that Boko Haram terrorists perpetrated against innocent people in the northeast.

    The Permanent Representative of UK to the UN, Amb. Matthew Rycroft, stated this at the Security Council briefing on ‘Peace and Security in Africa’ with focus on Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    Rycroft recalled the Council’s visit to the Lake Chad region in March, saying “I’m sure that none of us who are on that visit will forget the stories of anguish that we heard there”.

    “So many of them from mothers or daughters who had lost everything – their children, their families, their homes, their hope – all to Boko Haram. Sadly, it seems that these stories are still being told.

    “In spite of the efforts of the UN, and the AU and governments of the region, the suffering continues – with over two million people still displaced in the Lake Chad region; over 96 per cent of them because of the insurgency.”

    According to him, it was high time everything was done to break the cycle of violence being perpetrated by the Boko Haram terrorists in the country.

    “Put simply Mr President, we need to break the cycle. And by we, I mean all of us, including this Security Council, but responsibility must fall, first and foremost, to the governments affected,” Rycroft said.

    “It means governments holding to account those who have committed these crimes; showing that there can be really no impunity and no escape; that the rule of law applies to everyone.

    “And we need to help them in that effort. And that’s why the UK, together with our UN and NGO partners, are supporting the Nigerian government to re-establish basic social services to areas they have stabilised.”

    “It’s why we provide training to the Nigerian Armed Forces and to African Peacekeeping contingents on protecting civilians and on preventing sexual and gender based violence,” the UK envoy said.

    He said at the heart of addressing the huge humanitarian challenges caused by the Boko Haram crisis meant women’s equality in all aspects of politics, government and society.

    “It’s unacceptable that women continue to be so poorly represented in formal governance and peace processes when time after time studies show that women’s participation in these processes aids their ultimate success.

    “In Nigeria, for instance, women’s participation in the House of Representatives and Senate has fallen since 2011; it now stands at around five per cent,” he said.

    The UK envoy advocated for the full, active participation of women saying “women have spent too long enduring and surviving these crises; it’s long past time for them to play their fullest part in solving them”.

    “I’m looking forward to Amina Mohammed’s briefing on her visit to Nigeria and to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, two crucial countries, including for the Women, Peace and Security agenda which was the reason for her visit that she will be briefing us on.

    “And on Northeast Nigeria, I was very glad to co-lead the Council there as part of our  Lake Chad Basin visit back in March.

    “One of the things that we concluded that it was important not to have a one off visit but to have a series of sustained engagement, really getting under the surface of the interconnected problems there.

    “It’s not just climate change, it’s not just terrorism, it’s not just governance, it’s not just a famine, it’s everything interconnected with everything else,” Rycroft said.