Friday, June 21, 2024
spot_img

Congo-Kinshasa: War in the DRC: Community Radio Stations Taken Hostage, Journalists Threatened in North Kivu

In the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), which is in the throes of armed conflict, members of the national army have taken over the premises of two community radio stations and set up military positions there within a week. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) condemns these hostage-takings, which prevent journalists from working, and calls on the authorities to protect local media as a matter of urgency.

Radio silence on Radio communautaire et environnementale de Kanyabayonga (RCEKA-FM) since Saturday 1 June. On that day, soldiers of the Armed Forces of the DRC (FARDC) burst into its premises in Lubero territory in North Kivu, in the east of the country, a conflict zone between the military and the M23 rebels. The journalists present all fled, leaving the radio station, located on a hill, in the hands of soldiers who had come to occupy it for strategic reasons. They now fear that the bombardments will reach these installations and destroy the radio’s equipment. On 10 June, explosives had already damaged part of the radio tower.

The premises of another community radio station, Radio Maendeleo Kaseghe, located on a hill in Lubero, were also raided by national army soldiers on 2 June. The clashes between militia and members of the national army left journalists largely exposed, caught in the crossfire. “Our equipment was damaged during the attack, and the journalists narrowly escaped death,” deplores the radio station’s director, Bienvenu Sengemoja Muhindo, who was forced to stop broadcasting and flee Lubero with his colleagues.

“Community radio stations run by local journalists are a valuable source of information, particularly in war zones. The fact that they are being held hostage by the military, trapping them under the fire of war, prevents journalists from doing their job and deprives tens of thousands of inhabitants of their right to information. This is a serious attack on press freedom to which the Congolese authorities must react urgently so that free information does not disappear in the east of the DRC.”