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Democratic Republic of Congo: Arms supplies fuelling unlawful killings and rape
Political leaders must act immediately and halt arms supplies to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) where they continue to fuel unlawful killings, rape, looting and abductions, Amnesty International said in a new report published today.
Following waves of troop defections in May, the FARDC entrusted a colonel with a truck full of ammunition and tens of thousands of dollars for supplies. He then deserted to join a new armed group, taking the weapons and money with him.
As usual civilians bear the horrific cost of such lack of control, diversion of weapons and impunity.
In October 2008, the National Congress for the Defence of the People (Congrès national pour la défense du Peuple, CNDP) attacked the town of Kiwanja leaving 150 civilians dead, days after having looted a FARDC military depot in the eastern town of Rumangabo, seizing large quantities of weapons. Troops went from house to house, dragging young men out before stabbing them to death or shooting them in the head or upper chest.
During an interview with Amnesty International in 2008, the leader of the CNDP Laurent Nkunda declared:
“I’ve taken Rumangabo two times. We can’t even count the number of weapons we captured at Rumangabo, there were so many
“After the first time, the FARDC filled it up again, with arms of all calibres: anti-aircraft, anti-tank guns. It’s the government that gave them to me. I would like to say thank you to China, for giving the FARDC all these weapons.”
Arms transfers to Government forces also sustain more human rights violations, including mass rape and other acts of sexual violence. Between 31 December 2010 and 1 January 2011, FARDC soldiers attacked the village of Bushani in North Kivu province. The soldiers raped nearly 50 Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights – aged 16 to 65 – firing gunshots in the air and threatening them with death if they resisted.
Some of the ammunition cartridges subsequently found at the scene were manufactured in China.
The problem is not only manifest in eastern DRC. Amnesty International along with other organisations also documented serious human rights violations committed by the Congolese security forces, notably the Republican Guard, in the capital Kinshasa before and after the Presidential and Legislative elections of November 2011, including unlawful killings, torture and arbitrary arrests.
“It is long overdue for those countries supplying weapons to the DRC to carry out strict risk assessments. This would avoid the flow of arms supplies being used by all sides to commit crimes under international law," said Paule Rigaud.
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