Mass break-out at Congolese jail
November 20 BBC
Nearly 200 prisoners in the Democratic Republic of Congo have escaped
from a jail in the remote north-west of the country. The mass break-out
on Tuesday occurred as a hearing was taking place in their prison in
Gemena to try to reduce the backlog of defendants awaiting trial.
Lawyers said the inmates began throwing stones as the court sat
through the second of 60 cases scheduled that day. Mutinies are frequent
in Congolese prisons where conditions are harsh.
The BBC's Thomas Hubert in the capital, Kinshasa, says after decades
of neglect and successive wars, the Congolese justice system is barely
functioning, with many courthouses in ruins and devoid of basic
equipment. 'Not fed' News of the incident has only just emerged.
"It looked like a crowd walking out of a church or a stadium,"
Francis Wombali, a lawyer assisting a defendant at the hearing that was
taking place inside the prison, told the BBC.
Prosecutor Felicien Kibeka said the prisoners became unruly in the
overcrowded room where only two policemen were present to maintain
order.
He said he barely had time to jump into a car and save his life
before the prisoners broke through the prison gates. Only a handful of
the 169 escapees have been recaptured. Our reporter says security forces
in Equateur province are dealing with the aftermath of a rebellion in
the area earlier this year and are unlikely to be on the hunt for the
others.
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