Kasanga massacre
The Kasanga massacre occurred on 12 February 2025, when Allied Democratic Forces militants entered the village of Mayba in Lubero Territory, North Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo and abducted at least 70 Christian civilians. The captives were subsequently taken to a Protestant church in Kasanga, North Kivu, where they were beheaded via machetes. Their bodies were discovered on 14 February 2025.
The United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo considers the reports of the massacre as "unverified", while Vatican News described the reports as "confirmed".
Background
The ADF are a Ugandan Islamist group who began an insurgency in 1996. It spread to the Democratic Republic of the Congo and intensified during the 2010s. Their attacks in North Kivu include a massacre in Beni in 2016. During the late 2010s, the group began to affiliate with the Islamic State. In 2020, Musa Baluku proclaimed that the ADF had ceased to exist and was succeeded by the Islamic State – Central Africa Province. In North Kivu, during January 2023, the ADF carried out massacres in Kasindi, Makugwe and Kirindera.In March 2023, nine people were killed and several others went missing following the armed attack carried out by ADF terrorists in the Nguli village in the Lubero territory, North Kivu. In the same month, the rebels took civilians hostage in the village of Katiri in Isale Kasongwere Groupement, in the Beni Territory, North Kivu. The insurgents also erected a stronghold in the Virunga National Park between the villages of Kavasewa and Karuruma.
Attack
Abductions
At 4:00 am on 12 February 2025, armed members of the ADF entered the village of Mayba, in Lubero Territory, North Kivu, where they ordered residents to come out of their homes. They immediately took at least 20 civilians captive and left before returning at around 6:00 pm. Upon returning the ADF militants surrounded the village and rounded up an additional 50 civilians.Killings
Once all 70 people were abducted, they were taken to a Protestant CECA 20 church in Kasanga, a neighbouring village near Lubero in Lubero Territory, North Kivu, where they were tied up and executed by machetes. The bodies were eventually discovered on 14 February 2025 still in the church.Public reaction
The attack has sparked both local and international reactions.Religious institutions
Open Doors UK strongly condemned the attack and called upon "civil societies, governments and international organisations to prioritise civilian protection in eastern DRC where armed groups, such as the ADF, are operating," especially when few people are held accountable in these region, according to an Open Doors legal expert. Aid to the Church in Need confirmed the massacre and its local source claimed that the motive for the killing was because "these victims were unable to resist or endure the forced march" to carry looted goods. ACN did not itself make a statement. Both sources relied on local sources, which were kept anonymous. Vatican News reported on 24 February 2025 that ACN, an aid organization of the Catholic Church, and the Agenzia Fides news agency had confirmed the massacre.Military, governments, and intergovernmental organizations
The UN Human Rights Council received a letter from the European Centre for Law and Justice, which acted on information provided by the Goma-based Africa New Day NGO. The ECLJ confirmed the deaths of 70 Christian civilians and denounced the spread of misinformation that the attack did not explicitly target Christians because over 80% of the Congolese population are Christian. Although the Council received the document, its resolutions did not explicitly mention the attack. It did, however, comment on relevant and similar topics. MONUSCO, the United Nations peacekeeping mission in the DRC, released a statement on 24 February 2025 stating that the reports "remain unverified." In its statement, MONUSCO acknowledged that a civil society source had reported discovering over 70 bodies, including those of women, children, and elderly individuals, inside a church building in Maiba village. The victims were allegedly bound and executed with bladed weapons by unidentified assailants. It stressed, however, that "these reports remain unverified".The European Union's Parliament broached a question for written answer on 10 March 2025 regarding the ADF's presence and other rebel groups in the DRC more broadly. At the time, the question of this violence in passing the Memorandum of Understanding on minerals between the EU and Rwanda was critical. A motion for resolution on the attack, specifically for the end of defending religious freedom and security, stated that the EU condemned the attacks, stressed the persecution of religious groups, claimed that al-Qaeda-linked cells were operating the region, and called for numerous instruments of international institutions and human rights groups to resolve and avoid human right abuses. It acknowledged that Rwanda had a "destabilising" role in the DRC and requested the Commission to review the matter before any decision on the EU-Rwanda MoU on critical raw materials would be made.
The United Kingdom's Parliament had an Early Day Motion of acts of violence in the DRC, signed by seven members. It confirmed the attack, and reinforced the ADF's link to ISIL. Signatories concurred that the attack was "a heinous act of violence against civilians," that ADF rebels must be held accountable, and called on governments and the institution of which they are a part of to "prioritise civilian protection in DRC where armed groups are operating."
Human Rights Groups
The International Committee of the Red Cross declined to confirm or deny the claims.The ECJL stated that "the is once again sinking into violence," primarily due to M23 activity which left 7,000 dead and half a million displaced. Furthermore, it is this violence which allowed ISIL-affiliated ADF rebels to "escalate targeted killings and religious persecution." In response to the "escalating crisis" and this massacre, the ECLJ "launched an international campaign to demand accountability, justice and urgent protection for Christian communities." In the immediate aftermath of the attack, the ECLJ wrote formal letters to numerous organizations including the UN, EU, and numerous African institutions.