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Police fires teargas on churchgoers in DR Congo

Police fires teargas on churchgoers in DR Congo

Democratic Republic Of Congo

Congolese police fired teargas on Friday to disperse dozens of churchgoers who had gathered in the capital Kinshasa to mourn seven people killed in protests against President Joseph Kabila two weeks ago.

Opposition figureheads including Felix Tshisekedi and Vital Kamerhe and foreign diplomats were among the mourners.

A Reuters cameraman who was filming the church service said police fired a volley of teargas outside, apparently to prevent the gathering turning into another political demonstration.

“I don’t know why they fired teargas at us. Truly, this government has to go,” said a mourner fleeing the cloud of teargas who gave only her first name of Florence.

Scores have been killed in protests over Kabila’s future in the past two years and militia violence has destabilised swathes of Congo, stoking fears the vast central African country will slide back into civil wars.

Security forces in Democratic Republic of Congo killed at least seven people in the capital on New Year’s Eve during demonstrations that Catholic activists organised to protest Kabila’s refusal to step down, the United Nations said.

The head of the Roman Catholic Church in Congo, Pierrot Mwanamputu, two days later condemned that repression as “nothing more, nothing less than barbarism”.

The police, which admit killing only four people, described those killed as militants and gangsters.

The Catholic church, an institution that enjoys broad credibility in Congo, has emerged as a lightning rod for opposition to Kabila’s efforts to stay in power with no mandate, while his political opposition remains weak and fragmented.

It brokered a deal between Kabila and the opposition at the end of 2016 under which an election would be held by early this year, but it has slipped again and is now loosely scheduled for the end of this year.

This has fuelled suspicion that Kabila may try to remove constitutional term limits on continuing in office.

“Our brothers and sisters died because they took a decision to remind us that (this) … agreement must be respected,” Donation Bafuidinsoni, the Auxiliary Bishop of Kinshasa told mourners at the service.

The church’s bishops are making ever louder criticism of human rights abuses by the government and alleged plans by Kabila to remove term limits stopping him from running for re-election — Kabila has declined to comment on whether that is his intention.

In power since his father was killed in office in 2001, Kabila blames delays on the logistics of voter registration.

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