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Homemade explosive device in east Congo injures at least 10

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A homemade explosive device went off in a cinema in the eastern Congolese city of Butembo on Monday, wounding at least 10 people, including children and teenagers, an army official and a hospital worker said.

It was not immediately clear who was behind the attack, which security forces are investigating, said local army spokesperson Anthony Mwalushayi, who gave a provisional report of three injured.

An employee at a local university clinic, Mbayahi Nathan, said the facility received 10 injured people after the explosion.

“They were between 10 and 21 years old,” he said, adding that one patient’s injuries were life-threatening.

Butembo, a trading hub of almost 1 million people, is sometimes the target of militants known as the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF).

An improvised bomb that detonated outside the national intelligence agency’s Butembo office last month, wounding two agents, was suspected to be an ADF attack, according to local police.

Growing insecurity in Congo’s mineral-rich east spurred violent demonstrations in July against the United Nations’ peacekeeping mission in Congo, which was accused of being too passive.

The protests, which were concentrated in Butembo, killed dozens of civilians, peacekeepers and Congolese police.

The UN mission pulled out of Butembo in August as a result.

The ADF is a Ugandan militia that has been active in east Congo since the 1990s and killed scores of civilians.

 

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