Eight people were killed Sunday and dozens arrested as security
forces in DR Congo cracked down on Catholic worshippers who gathered at
churches across the country to demand that President Joseph Kabila
leaves power, a UN source said.
Despite
appeals notably from the United Nations to respect people's right to
protest, troops fired tear gas into churches and bullets in the air to
break up gatherings at Catholic masses, in one case arresting 12 altar
boys leading a protest in Kinshasa.
Internet links were also down as church and opposition groups defied a ban by authorities to push ahead with the demonstrations.
"Eight
deaths — seven in Kinshasa and one in Kananga," in central Democratic
Republic of Congo, the source told AFP, adding there had been "82
arrests, including priests, in the capital and "41 in the rest of the
country."
In his end-of-year speech,
Kabila insisted that the recent publication of an electoral timetable
for the December 2018 vote "is driving us irreversibly toward organising
elections".
"I invite you to take
ownership (of the voting process) and exercise your right through this
process," he added in a pre-recorded speech broadcast on state
television.
Warning
He
also seemed to deliver a warning to protesters, urging people to remain
"alert" in order to "bar the road to those who [have sought to] use
elections as a pretext in recent years, and who today would be tempted
to use violence, to stop the ongoing Democratic process and plunge the
country into the abyss".
At least
four of the dead were civilians in the vast, mineral-rich central
African country, wracked by tension over delayed elections.
A government statement said one policeman had also been killed.
"Two
young people were killed in the parish of Saint-Alphonse de Matete," in
the east of the country, while another died in the Masina area, police
spokesman Colonel Pierrot-Rombaut Mwanamputu said in a televised
statement.
An AFP reporter at a
demonstration in the central city of Kananga saw a man shot in the chest
by soldiers who opened fire on worshippers gathered for what church
leaders said would be a peaceful protest.
The
protesters were seeking a promise from Kabila that he will not seek to
further extend his time in power in the mostly Catholic former Belgian
colony.
Delayed elections
Kabila has been in power since 2001.
Delayed elections to replace him are currently set for December 2018.
The United Nations says dozens of people wee killed during anti-government protests in 2017.
Impatience
boiled over on Sunday, with all the country's main opposition and civil
society groups joining in the call for peaceful protests.
One army officer threatened a team of AFP reporters covering the crackdown at St. Michael's church in Kinshasa.
"If you don't clear out of here, I'll order that you be shot at," he said.
"Press, or not, no one is allowed inside. What's more, you have a white man with you — that's a race that causes us problems."
A journalist for French radio station RFI was briefly detained, AFP reporters saw.
Soldiers storm church
A churchgoer who asked not to be named described to AFP how officers dispersed worshippers from one mass in Kinshasa.
"While we were praying, the soldiers and the police entered the church compound and fired tear gas in the church," he said.
One
parishioner who identified herself as Chantal said: "People fell,
first-aiders are resuscitating old ladies who have fallen" — but added
the priest carried on saying mass.
At
the Notre Dame cathedral in the northern Lingwala district of Kinshasa,
security forces deployed tear gas as opposition leader Felix Tshisekedi
arrived, AFP reporters said.
Altar boys arrested
After
the altar boys dressed in their liturgical robes were detained other
protesters started singing for the Virgin Mary to "make Kabila go".
Catholics
of Kinshasa's "Lay Coordinating Committee" had invited worshippers to
walk, holding bibles, rosaries and crucifixes, after mass.
The country has not had a peaceful transition of power since independence from Belgium in 1960.
Kabila
succeeded his assassinated father Laurent Kabila in 2001 and refused to
step down at the end of his second and final term in December 2016.
Elections
had been due to take place by the end of 2017 under a church-mediated
deal but were further delayed, outraging Kabila's opponents.
The poll is now scheduled for December 23, 2018.
Government spokesman Lambert Mende earlier alleged that "weapons of war have been distributed" by opponents of the government.
"These
destabilising acts of agitation aim to create an atmosphere of
insurrection which would enable them to seize power in our country by
undemocratic means," he said, citing a government report.
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