Democratic Republic of Congo’s government said on Wednesday it will investigate the deaths of an American and a Swedish expert for the United Nations and their interpreter, whose bodies were found in a shallow grave Monday after the team disappeared more than two weeks ago.
Sweden said it was opening a murder investigation, and the UN Security Council strongly condemned the killings.
American Michael Sharp, Swedish national Zaida Catalan and their interpreter Betu Tshintela went missing March 12 along with driver Isaac Kabuayi and two motorbike drivers in Central Kasai province while looking into recent large-scale violence and alleged human rights violations by the Congolese army and local militia groups.
A UN Security Council diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, said the experts were investigating alleged mass graves.
Thorough examination
The UN Security Council issued a statement Wednesday night saying its members condemned the killings “in the strongest terms” and also expressed concern at “the unknown status of the four Congolese nationals accompanying them”.
Council members called on the Congolese government “to swiftly and fully investigate these crimes and bring the still unidentified perpetrators to justice” and backed a UN inquiry, stressing that attacks targeting civilians “may constitute war crimes under international law.”
The UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has said the world body would conduct an inquiry into the deaths, saying the cause had not yet been determined. He called on DRC to do the same.
The UN deputy spokesperson Farhan Haq told reporters the UN hopes the cause of death of the two experts “will be determined following a more thorough examination.”
“Given that they have been found dead, we believe that there’s likely grounds that this was a form of criminal act, but we need to determine cause of death,” he said.
Haq said the UN will look into “what their security conditions had been, what might have happened to them, as well as, of course, to the four Congolese nationals … for whom we are continuing to search.”
He said there were other remains found at the site that still need to be analysed.
Mass graves
Sharp, from western Pennsylvania, and Catalan were “killed senselessly,” the US ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, said in a statement.
Sweden’s national police said it has initiated a murder investigation into Catalan’s death, and Sweden’s prime minister urged DRC to investigate.
DRC government spokesperson Lambert Mende said authorities would look into the deaths and seek the UN experts’ missing Congolese colleagues.
Mende also said Congolese authorities also will look into other recent violence in Central Kasai province, including the deaths of 39 police officers who had been killed by militia forces.
The UN last week reported the discovery since January of more than two dozen mass graves in three Kasai provinces. And five videos have emerged in recent weeks that appear to show Congolese soldiers firing on militia members.
While the violence is linked to local power struggles, there are also clear ties to DRC’s current political crisis, according to Human Rights Watch.
Anger has been growing in the country at long-delayed presidential elections, and dozens were killed in December amid protests as President Joseph Kabila stayed on past the end of his mandate. A deal reached between the ruling party and opposition to hold elections by the end of this year, without Kabila, remains fragile as the UN urges its implementation.
Security forces have been known to back local leaders seen as loyal to Kabila, while militia groups support those who are believed to support the opposition, the rights group said.
Source: AP