Yahoo = AFP, Alain WANDIMOYI, 22 August 2020
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| DR Congo vows to protect Nobel laureate Mukwege after death threats |
Congolese gynaecologist Denis Mukwege shared the Nobel
Peace Prize in 2018 for his work against sexual violence in war
The government vowed Saturday to protect Nobel peace
laureate Denis Mukwege and investigate death threats against him after he called
for an international court to try crimes in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
DR Congo's president Felix Tshisekedi pledged that the
interior, security and justice ministers and others would "take all
measures necessary to ensure Dr Mukwege's security" and "open
investigations", the cabinet said in a report, without giving detail.
Mukwege, a Congolese gynaecologist who shared the
Nobel Peace Prize in 2018 for his work against sexual violence in war, and his
relatives have been the target of "intimidation, hateful messages and
death threats," it said.
This has occurred while he has "pleaded for peace
in the country's east, by proposing the establishment of an international
criminal court for the DRC in order to try the serious crimes committed there
against the civilian population," it said.
On July 26, in a message on his Twitter account,
Mukwege wrote "these are the same ones who are still killing in the
DRC", referring to a massacre in the east.
Civilians in Kipupu, a village in South Kivu on the
Fizi heights overlooking Lake Tanganyika, came under attack on July 16, with
the death toll ranging widely between 18 and 220.
"The macabre stories from Kipupu are in a
straight line from the massacres that have hit the DRC since 1996," the
peace prize winner said in a tweet.
The area has seen violence between the Banyamulenge
community -- the descendants of ethnic Tutsi migrants who came from Rwanda --
and other local communities such as the Babembe for the past year.
In early 1996, the first Congo war erupted, led by a
rebellion backed by regular troops from several neighbouring countries,
particularly Rwanda, Uganda and Burundi.
The second Congo war that took place from 1998 until
2003 involved a dozen armies from the region, 30 armed groups and two main
rebellions: one in the east supported by Rwanda and another in the north backed
by Uganda.

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