The coup bid took place in the early hours of Sunday outside the residence of Economy Minister Vital Kamerhe in the capital’s northern Gombe area. The group then went to the Palais de la Nation that houses President Felix Tshisekedi’s offices, brandishing flags of Zaire, the name of the Democratic Republic of Congo under ex-dictator Mobutu Sese Seko, who was overthrown in 1997.
An army spokesman later announced in a message broadcast on national TV that defence and security forces had stopped “an attempted coup d’etat”. Kamerhe, who is a candidate for National Assembly president, and his family were unharmed but two members of their security detail were killed.
The attack “aimed to assassinate” the minister, his team said on Monday, showing reporters where the bullets had hit vehicles and his residence’s walls, and broken windows. While daily activity resumed as normal in Gombe on Monday, many questions remained. “It (the government) is trying to divert our attention from social and security problems,” Joel, a civil servant, told AFP.
“I don’t think that in the city centre of the capital, attackers could storm a minister’s house or the Palais de la Nation without the authorities being informed.”
– ‘Not afraid’ –
The group had planned to attack the home of new Prime Minister Judith Suminwa and the residence of Defence Minister Jean-Pierre Bemba, army spokesman General Sylvain Ekenge said late on Sunday. But they “could not identify the home” of Suminwa and had not been able to find Bemba at his residence, leading them to Kamerhe’s home and the Palais de la Nation, he added. The ECiDe party of opposition figure Martin Fayulu pointed on Monday night to questions surrounding what they termed the “alleged attempted coup d’etat”.
People are “right to wonder what the next pretence will be”, the party said in a statement signed by secretary general Devos Kitoko. “Politicians, stop distracting us, life is already very hard in this country,” bread and avocado seller Maman Ndosi told AFP, sitting in front of her merchandise in Gombe district.
“I’m not afraid, because I’ve already seen more than this joke!” added the mother who, like many Congolese people, is very sceptical of official information. The plot was led by Christian Malanga, a Congolese man who was a “naturalised American” and who was killed by security forces, Ekenge said. “We also have a naturalised British subject, the number two of the group,” Ekenge said.
But in Washington, the State Department said it had no record of Malanga being a US citizen. The State Department said it could not confirm the US citizenship of two purported Americans in custody due to privacy laws. The United States nonetheless said it would cooperate “to the fullest extent possible” in the investigation and again condemned the coup attempt.
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