Explosions rock Kinshasa after apparent coup bid (Agencies) Updated: 2004-06-11 15:23 Explosions and artillery fire
echoed across the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo early on
Friday after renegade presidential guards briefly seized state radio, residents
in the city said.
"I heard four explosions and then sometime later a larger fifth explosion. It
was very clear," one resident in the city center said.
Others reported hearing sporadic bursts of automatic gunfire at around 1:30
a.m. EDT. The streets were deserted apart from heavily armed troops.
The British ambassador said he had heard artillery fire coming from camp
Tshatshi, the biggest military base in Kinshasa, situated on the outskirts of
the city on the banks of the Congo river.
"I can hear cannon fire coming from camp Tshatshi," Ambassador Jim Atkinson
told Reuters.
Members of the elite unit which guards President Joseph Kabila earlier seized
state radio in an apparent coup bid, but the government said loyal troops had
regained control of the station soon afterwards.
The presidential guards' Major Eric Lenge said on the radio the country's
transitional process was not working and that he was suspending it and taking
control himself, U.N. and government officials said.
POWER CUT
A power outage plunged Kinshasa into darkness after he spoke.
"Some officers in the presidential guard took control of the state radio at
2:30 this morning (9:30 p.m. EDT Thursday), but loyalist soldiers retook control
two and a half hours later," government spokesman Vital Kamerhe said.
He did not specify if there had been a battle for the radio station and said
it was unclear how many guards were involved.
A presidential spokesman said Kabila was safe.
"The president is in Kinshasa and he is in control," spokesman Kudura Kasongo
said, adding that Lenge had "tried to destabilize the government."
The incident comes days after government troops recaptured the eastern town
of Bukavu from dissident soldiers following a week-long occupation launched in
protest at what the dissidents said was the persecution of their ethnic group.
The revolt in Bukavu exposed the weakness of Kabila's transitional government
installed a year ago, which is still struggling to restore central authority
across Africa's third-largest country after five years of war.
The clashes in the mineral-rich east also raised fears of a wider regional
conflict involving Congo and its tiny neighbor Rwanda, which invaded the former
Zaire in 1996 and 1998.
Gunmen attacked four military bases and two television stations in Kinshasa
in March in an apparent coup attempt -- the first political violence in the city
for five years. Kabila's office blamed members of the personal guard of late
dictator Mobutu Sese Seko for those attacks.
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