KINSHASA (Congo),
(AP)
AN ATTEMPTED jailbreak in
Congo’s main prison in the capital left at least 129 people dead,
most of them in a stampede,
authorities said on Tuesday.
A provisional assessment
showed that 24 inmates were
shot dead by “warning” gunshots as they tried to escape
from the overcrowded Makala
Central Prison in Kinshasa early on Monday, Congolese
Interior Minister Jacquemin
Shabani said on the social platform X.
“There are also 59 injured
people taken into care by the
Government, as well as some
cases of women raped,” he said,
adding that order has been
restored at the prison, part of
which was burned in the attack.
Makala, Congo’s largest penitentiary with a capacity for
1,500 people, holds over 12,000
inmates, most of whom are
awaiting trial, Amnesty
International said in its latest
country report.
The facility has
recorded previous jailbreaks,
including in 2017 when an
attack by a religious sect freed
dozens. Gunfire inside the prison
started around midnight on
Sunday into Monday morning, residents said. A senior
Government official earlier
said only two deaths were
confirmed during the incident, a figure disputed by
rights activists.
Videos that appeared to be
from the prison showed bodies lying on the ground, many
of them with visible injuries.
Another video showed
inmates carrying people who
appeared to be dead into a
vehicle.
There were no signs of
forced entry into the prison,
which is located in the city
centre, 5 kilometers (3 miles)
from the presidential palace.
The attempted escape was
plotted from inside the
prison by inmates in one of
the wings, Mbemba Kabuya,
the deputy justice minister,
told the local Top Congo FM
radio.
In the hours that followed
the attack, the road to the
prison was cordoned off
while authorities convened
a panel to investigate the incident.
Makala — among other
prisons in Congo — is so
overcrowded that people
often die from starvation,
activists say. Scores of
inmates have been released
this year as part of efforts to
decongest the prisons.
Justice Minister Constant
Mutamba called the attack a
“premeditated act of sabotage”, adding that those who
“instigated these acts of sabotage ... Will receive a stern
response”.
He also announced a ban
on the transfer of inmates
from the prison and said
authorities will build a new
prison, among other efforts
to reduce overcrowding.