Four dead in DR Congo mine attack, two Chinese missing by AFP Staff Writers Bunia, Dr Congo (AFP) Aug 12, 2022 Four people have been killed and two Chinese workers gone missing after soldiers and militiamen battled over a mine in troubled eastern DR Congo, the army said on Friday. The CODECO militia attacked a Chinese-managed mining site in Mungbwalu village, Ituri province, overnight on Wednesday, army spokesman Lieutenant Jules Ngongo told AFP. Militiamen killed three miners in the attack and kidnapped four Chinese workers. But the army staged a counter-attack and managed to free two of the captives, Ngongo said. "We lost a soldier, who succumbed to his wounds," he added. Innocent Madukadala, the chief of a group of villages in the Mungbwalu area, confirmed that the army had freed two Chinese men. The status of the missing two Chinese is unclear, however. Armed groups often fight for control of mines in gold-rich Ituri, which has been plagued by militia violence for years. Attacks on Chinese-managed mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo also appear to have increased of late. Two Chinese nationals were killed in a mine attack in Ituri in November. The CODECO -- the name for the Cooperative for the Development of the Congo -- is a political-religious sect that claims to represent the interests of the Lendu ethnic group. It is considered one of the deadliest of over 120 militias operating in the eastern DRC, blamed for a number of ethnic massacres in Ituri. Last year, the Congolese government placed security officials in charge of the administration of Ituri and neighbouring North Kivu province in a bid to curb violence. The measure has failed to stop attacks.
Burkina junta says army to win back areas lost to rebels Ouagadougou (AFP) Aug 12, 2022 Burkina Faso's army will deploy a new strategy to push back jihadist insurgents and recapture lost territory, the defence minister said Friday. The landlocked Sahel state is in the grip of a seven-year-old insurgency that has claimed more than 2,000 lives and forced some 1.9 million people to leave their homes. Burkina Faso's insurgency has been concentrated in the north and east, led by assailants suspected to have links with Al-Qaeda or the Islamic State group, but other regions have not bee ... read more
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