Ishusho y’ubusobanuro
Birapfobya
Kinshasa constitutional protests (June 2026): were live bullets fired against opposition rallies?
Ibyabonetse
Violent clashes on 12 June 2026 are confirmed: police used tear gas, stones were thrown, and opposition leader Martin Fayulu was injured. Claims that live ammunition was fired into crowds remain unverified by hospitals or the UN Joint Human Rights Office. The Senate passed a referendum bill on 16 June amid ongoing tension.
Ibyavuzwe
President Tshisekedi's security forces and pro-government "Forces of Progress" militias used live ammunition to shoot unarmed protesters opposing a third presidential term during constitutional reform rallies in Kinshasa.
Isesengura ryacu
On 12 June 2026, opposition demonstrations in Kinshasa against a proposed constitutional referendum escalated into physical confrontations outside parliament and near opposition party premises. International wires including AFP and Reuters reported that police deployed tear gas to disperse crowds and that violent clashes involved stone-throwing. Opposition leader Martin Fayulu was reported injured during the unrest, and the headquarters of his ECIDE party was attacked with stones by individuals described in reporting as pro-government activists.
Witness accounts relayed to journalists alleged that live gunfire was used. As of this review, BADRAMA has not seen independent confirmation from hospital admission records, forensic documentation, or a UN Joint Human Rights Office (UNJHRO) statement establishing that live ammunition caused verified casualties during the 12 June events. The government has publicly framed the response as crowd control.
This episode marks an escalation from the partial "ville morte" adherence BADRAMA reviewed on 3 June 2026. On 16 June 2026, reporting indicated the Senate adopted legislation enabling a constitutional referendum pathway that opposition coalitions—including the C64—oppose as a route toward extending presidential term limits ahead of 2028.
BADRAMA treats tear-gas use and stone-throwing violence as documented in credible press reporting. The specific claim that security forces fired live ammunition at unarmed protesters remains unverified and should not be stated as established fact without independent medical or human-rights verification.
Witness accounts relayed to journalists alleged that live gunfire was used. As of this review, BADRAMA has not seen independent confirmation from hospital admission records, forensic documentation, or a UN Joint Human Rights Office (UNJHRO) statement establishing that live ammunition caused verified casualties during the 12 June events. The government has publicly framed the response as crowd control.
This episode marks an escalation from the partial "ville morte" adherence BADRAMA reviewed on 3 June 2026. On 16 June 2026, reporting indicated the Senate adopted legislation enabling a constitutional referendum pathway that opposition coalitions—including the C64—oppose as a route toward extending presidential term limits ahead of 2028.
BADRAMA treats tear-gas use and stone-throwing violence as documented in credible press reporting. The specific claim that security forces fired live ammunition at unarmed protesters remains unverified and should not be stated as established fact without independent medical or human-rights verification.
Ibimenyetso byasuzumwe
AFP and Reuters coverage (12–13 June 2026) on tear gas, stone-throwing, and Fayulu's injury; AP/Washington Post on Senate passage (16 June 2026). Live-fire allegations reported as witness claims without independent casualty verification at time of review.
Inkomoko
Related BADRAMA review: /fact-check/kinshasa-ville-morte-2026-06-03-en. Add specific Reuters URL for 12 June clashes when archived. Monitor UNJHRO DRC and Kinshasa hospital statements before upgrading live-fire claims.