More than 3,300 people have been killed in the violence in the Democratic
Republic of Congo’s Kasai region since last October, the Catholic Church says.
The figure, reported by Reuters, is from Church sources in the country.
The deaths are the result of clashes between the army and a rebel
group, but civilians have also been caught up in the violence.
The UN has reported on the discovery of more than 20 mass graves but
has put the death toll so far at about 400.
According to the church, 20 villages have been completely destroyed,
half of them by government troops.
The UN human rights chief, Prince Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, said
investigators in Kasai province had identified dozens of mass graves along with
harrowing evidence of people being shot, burned or hacked to death.
Atrocities were being carried out by the security forces and a
government-backed militia, known as the Bana Mura, which was set up to help
fight a rival group known as the Kamuina Nsapu, Prince Zeid said.
He added that local authorities had denied the UN access to information
about what was happening in the region. The UN has said it has evidence that
hundreds of villagers from the Luba and Lulua ethnic groups have been killed.
The UN Human Rights Council is likely to vote this week on whether to
mandate an independent investigation into the violence following what the
group’s commissioner described as horrific atrocities committed in Kasai
province.
The Congolese authorities have said they would reject it.
More than a million people have been displaced in the region in the
last year and aid workers say the humanitarian response on the ground has so
far been inadequate.
Violence erupted in the once peaceful Kasai region last August, after
the death of a local leader during fighting with security forces.

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