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DR Congo militia fighting kills 11 despite peace deal

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Fighting between DR Congo’s regular army and a militia force has claimed 11 lives and breached a peace deal in the conflict-plagued northeast of the country, according to UN sources.

In the violence overnight Wednesday, three soldiers, six militia fighters and two civilians were killed in Ituri province, the UN Radio Okapi reported.

“Ten people were seriously wounded, among them six militia members and four soldiers,” the report said late Thursday.

The Front for Patriotic Resistance in Ituri (FRPI), one of many rebel movements active in eastern DR Congo, signed a peace accord with the government on February 28 this year, in the presence of the United Nations.

The accord provided for a ceasefire and the integration of FRPI fighters into the army, with draft legislation to give an amnesty to the rebels except in cases of war crimes or crimes against humanity.

Under the deal, the militia members — several hundred men — have since been confined to their quarters awaiting their transfer to the armed forces (FARDC).

The overnight battle is believed to have broken out when FARDC soldiers opened fire to disperse FRPI fighters who attempted to attack a military command post.

The FRPI has remained active since ethnic conflict took tens of thousands of lives in Ituri between 1999 and 2003 until a European military force named Operation Artemis intervened under French leadership.

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