More than a dozen killed in DRC attacks

An initial assault killed seven people, territorial administrator Donat Kibwana has said, adding that "the attack took place at 11:00 pm and it was the ADF", which originated in the 1990s as an Ugandan rebel group.

Soldiers from the Democratic Republic of Congo arrive on an open military truck near the town of Kibumba at its border with Rwanda after fighting broke out in the Eastern Congo town, June 11, 2014.
Reuters

Soldiers from the Democratic Republic of Congo arrive on an open military truck near the town of Kibumba at its border with Rwanda after fighting broke out in the Eastern Congo town, June 11, 2014.

More than a dozen people have been killed in two attacks near Beni in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo that were blamed on the Daesh ADF group, local sources have said.

Late on Saturday, an initial assault killed seven people, territorial administrator Donat Kibwana told an AFP correspondent, adding that "the attack took place at 11:00 pm and it was the ADF", which originated in the 1990s as an Ugandan rebel group.

Kibwana said the toll was still provisional and that the attack occurred at a town called Kisima.

A second assault took place early on Sunday near Oicha, which is in the same region as Beni, where the local authority and other sources said six people had died.

READ MORE: ADF militia kills scores in eastern DRC

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640 civilians killed

The ADF is one of more than 100 militias that plague the eastern provinces of the vast DRC.

The group has killed more than 640 civilians since the army launched a crackdown on it last November, according to an unofficial count.

The ADF has never claimed responsibility for attacks. But since April 2019, several of its assaults have been claimed by the so-called Daesh's Central Africa Province, which has sometimes made factual errors in its statements.

A total of 2,127 people have died in eastern DRC since President Felix Tshisekedi's inauguration in January 2019, according an estimate in late October by experts at the Kivu Security Tracker (KST).

That is more than during the 20 years his predecessor Joseph Kabila was in power, during which 1,553 civilians are believed to have been killed, the KST says.

READ MORE: Revisiting the UN Mapping Report on the DRC, a decade later

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