Inter-ethnic violence kills over a dozen in southeastern Congo

Opposition supporters hold a poster carrying pictures of people killed during last week's protest in front of a opposition party Union for Democracy and Social Progress (UDPS) office in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, September 28, 2016. /REUTERS
Opposition supporters hold a poster carrying pictures of people killed during last week's protest in front of a opposition party Union for Democracy and Social Progress (UDPS) office in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, September 28, 2016. /REUTERS

More than a dozen people have died since the weekend in fighting in southeastern

Congo

between Bantus and Pygmies, local activists said on Tuesday, in the latest escalation in a bloody three-year ethnic conflict.

The Luba, a Bantu ethnic group, and the Twa, a Pygmy people who inhabit the Great Lakes region, have been in conflict since May 2013 in Democratic Republic of

Congo's Katanga region, known for its rich deposits of copper and other metals.

The violence, which has killed hundreds of civilians, has been fuelled by social tensions between Bantu villagers and the Twa, a hunting and gathering people who have long been denied access to land and basic services.

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David Ngoy, a local priest and member of the Diocesan Commission for Justice and Peace, told Reuters at least 16 people had been killed in fighting since Sunday.

He said many houses were burned near the town of Kabalo, about 1,000 kilometres northwest of

Congo's mining hub of Lubumbashi.

Ngoy said it was unclear what sparked this round of violence in the remote area.

Rogatien Kitenge, an advocate for Pygmy rights in the provincial capital of Kalemie, said he had received reports of between 13 and 16 people killed in tit-for-tat attacks between the two groups.

The provincial governor could not immediately be reached for comment.

Experts say security and humanitarian needs in

Congo's southeast have largely been neglected as foreign donors and UN troops focus on the eastern Kivu provinces and Ituri province further north, which have been ravaged by two decades of deadly conflict.

Heightened political tensions over the delay of a presidential election from next month to April 2018, amid accusations that President Joseph Kabila is trying to cling to power, have also raised fears of an upsurge in localised conflicts over ethnicity and control of natural resources.

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