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OIL AND GAS
HRW urges DR Congo to investigate attacks on activists
by Staff Writers
Kinshasa (AFP) June 04, 2014


Six arrested in Cameroon over Chinese worker abductions
Maroua, Cameroon (AFP) June 04, 2014 - Six people have been arrested over the kidnapping of 10 Chinese workers in northern Cameroon, two officials have told AFP, a raid that has been blamed on the Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram.

The kidnapping, on May 17, took place in Waza, a town near the border with Nigeria, when the workers' construction camp was raided in the middle of the night. A Cameroonian soldier was also killed in the attack.

"Six people have been taken in for questioning in Waza" as part of the investigation, a source close to the security services said on condition of anonymity.

Three Nigerians living in Waza were among those taken in for questioning, the same source said, adding that the latest arrest took place on Monday.

A local official confirmed the arrests to AFP.

"A number of people have been arrested during the course of the investigation. It is a military operation," the source said, without giving further details.

The kidnapping is believed to be the latest raid by Boko Haram who have been known to take advantage of a porous border to slip from their stronghold in northeastern Nigeria into Cameroon.

The authorities in Yaounde have been quick to blame the Islamist group, which has been waging a bloody insurgency in Nigeria since 2009, although the group has not claimed responsibility for the attack.

Cameroon shares a border of more than 2,000 kilometres (1,200 miles) with Nigeria, and the country's president has committed to sending 3,000 troops and police to the troubled border northern region over the next few weeks. The first troops have already started to arrive.

At the weekend, two Italian priests and a Canadian nun seized by suspected Boko Haram gunmen near the border were released after two months being held hostage.

Human Rights Watch called Wednesday on the Democratic Republic of Congo to investigate attacks and threats against opponents of a major oil exploration project at one of Africa's oldest national parks.

The group said activists and rangers at the Virunga National Park, home to some of the last surviving mountain gorillas rangers, had been detained by authorities and threatened or assaulted after criticising the project.

They include Emmanuel de Merode, the park's Belgian director, who was shot and seriously wounded by armed men on April 15 while driving alone.

De Merode had criticised the plan to explore for oil, saying it would have a negative impact on the park, its wildlife, and local communities.

"The attack on the national park's director was a painful and shocking reminder that people working to protect Africa's oldest park - its habitat, wildlife, and local communities - do so at enormous risk," said Ida Sawyer, senior Congo researcher at Human Rights Watch.

"Park rangers and activists should be able to oppose oil exploration in Virunga Park without risking their lives," Sawyer said.

British oil company SOCO International, which has a contract with the Congolese government to to explore for oil in and around the park, has condemned the use of violence and intimidation and denies any role. It said it would look into separate allegations of bribery, according to HRW.

HRW said a number of human rights and environmental activists who criticised the plans had received threatening text messages in the week after the attack on De Merode.

"You are playing with fire... it's useless to change your car because we know all the cars and we're everywhere you go with your team," said one.

"You think that by writing you're going to prevent us from extracting oil. You are going to die for nothing like de M�rode," said another.

Critics say the drilling would violate Congolese and international law. But many Congolese government officials support SOCO's plans for the financial benefits it would bring.

Created in 1925 during Belgian colonial rule, Virunga park covers nearly 800,000 hectares along the frontier with Uganda and Rwanda.

It is home to mountain gorillas and a small population of endangered lowland gorillas.

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