Friday, 19 May 2017

Nearly 70 prisoners flee in second DR Congo jail break



(FILES) This file photo taken on July 2, 2013 shows Congolese police and UN soldiers standing guard after an incident at the Makala jail in Kinshasa. Rebels from an outlawed political-religious group attacked Kinshasa’s central prison on May 17, 2017, breaking out their leader and about 50 other prisoners, the Congolese government said. “Followers of the Bundu Dia Kongo (BDK) attacked Makala prison at dawn and broke out around 50 prisoners including their guru, Ne Muanda Nsemi,” government spokesman Lambert Mende said, indicating that police had given chase. / AFP PHOTO / Junior D. KANNAH


Dozens of prisoners escaped from a jail in Democratic Republic of Congo early Friday, less than 48 hours after rebels attacked Kinshasa’s main prison, freeing their leader and 50 others.


“Among the 74 prisoners housed in the dilapidated prison in Kasangulu, 68 escaped,” local lawmaker Jean-Claude Vuemba told AFP, saying the breakout occurred at around 1:00 am.


The town lies about 40 kilometres (25 miles) southwest of the capital Kinshasa in the Kongo Central province.



Ten of the escaped prisoners were quickly “recaptured,” said Vuemba who criticised the inmates’ living conditions as deplorable.
 
 A local human rights activist who visited the prison on Friday said she had seen only four people there, two of them women.


It was not immediately clear how the prisoners escaped, with police saying investigators had been dispatched from Kinshasa.


The incident occurred just two days after rebels from an outlawed political-religious group attacked Kinshasa’s central prison.


The pre-dawn attack was carried out by followers of Bundu Dia Kongo (BDK), a secessionist rebel group that rejects Kinshasa’s authority and wants to set up a parallel state in the west of the country.


Government sources said at least eight people died during exchanges of gunfire in the assault to free Ne Muanda Nsemi, an MP who is the spiritual leader of the BDK — a group based in Kongo Central.


Nsemi was arrested in early March following a violent two-week siege of his home. The government has blamed his followers for a string of violent attacks since the start of the year.


By Wednesday evening, more than 4,000 of the 8,000 prisoners held in Makala prison were still missing, while 86 escapees had been returned, prisoner sources said.


There was no immediate suggestion the two jail breaks were related.

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