Congo-Kinshasa: UN Review of DR Congo Exposes Lack of Progress On Rights

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Address Constraints on Rights, Civilian Protection in Conflict Areas, Accountability

Last week, the United Nations Human Rights Council review of the Democratic Republic of Congo‘s human rights record revealed that the government had made little progress addressing the country’s widespread rights issues.

The Universal Periodic Review (UPR), a state-to-state rights review held for each country every 4½ years, showed that rights abuses have persisted, if not worsened, under President Félix Tshisekedi’s government.

During Congo’s previous review in 2019, Human Rights Watch and other rights groups submitted numerous recommendations.

During the 2019 process, we called on the government to ensure human rights activists were able to pursue their activities and criticize government policies without intimidation and retaliation. We pressed the government to ratify the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance; investigate and appropriately prosecute armed group members and security force members responsible for serious human rights abuses; and we urged authorities to increase efforts to prevent and punish extrajudicial executions and other serious violations by establishing a special mixed judicial mechanism.

Unfortunately, these calls remain as relevant today as they were in 2019. Despite our call for the government to abolish the death penalty, the government lifted its moratorium earlier this year. We have continued to document laws of war violations and the deepening humanitarian crisis in eastern Congo, including conflict-related sexual violence and the government’s repeated attacks on activists and restrictions on fundamental freedoms.