Ransom demand for release of
Catholic priest in DRC
Armed Forces of the DRC in Opra, North Kivu.- AFP |
The captors of a Catholic priest abducted on Easter Sunday
in the Democratic Republic of Congo have reportedly demanded a ransom for his
release.
A statement released on Tuesday by the National Episcopal
Conference of Congo (CENCO) said that the kidnappers of Father Celestin Ngango
had contactedthe St. Paul of Karambi parish demanding the equivalent of 500,000
US dollars in exchange for his freedom.
Father Ngango was forcefully made to get out of his car and
led into the jungle by armed men on Sunday shortly after he had celebrated
Easter Mass in his parish in the Diocese of Goma in North Kivu province.
Church officials have not yet revealed whether or not a
ransom will be paid.
North and South Kivu provinces, where tension has been high
for the past 23 years, has lately seen an eruption of violence among militia
groups which often extort money from civilians or fight each other for control
of mineral resources.
At the end of March ten people were killed in an attack in
the North Kivu area perpetrated by an alliance of militias leading to a scaled-
up army presence.
Another priest, Father Robert Masinda, was abducted in North
Kivu in January this year together with five other men, all of whom were
released two days later.
Three fathers of the Assumptionist Order, Jean-Pierre
Ndulani, Edmond Kisughi and Anselme Wasukundi, were seized there in October
2012, and fellow priests Jean-Pierre Akilimali and Charles Kipasa were abducted
in July last year.
CENCO has said there has been no news of any of them since
then.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét