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* Raids target army camp, governor’s office

* Attackers raise separatist flag

* Assailants repelled by army

KINSHASA, March 23 (Reuters) – Hundreds of gunmen attacked

official installations in Democratic Republic of Congo’s

southern mining hub of Lubumbashi before being repelled by

soldiers, the government said on Saturday.

The attack on the capital of the central African nation’s

copper and cobalt-rich Katanga province began around 1 PM (14.00

GMT) and targeted a military camp and the provincial governor’s

office, sending the city’s residents fleeing home.

“They were driven out and suffered heavy losses among their

ranks … There were several hundred of them,” Information

Minister Lambert Mende told Reuters.

“The shooting lasted one or two hours. We will provide a

full account of events in the coming hours,” he said.

Mende said Congolese authorities were still attempting to

identify the gunmen after some witnesses said they appeared to

belong to one of Congo’s mystical Mai Mai armed militia groups.

A resident contacted by Reuters said he had seen the bodies

of five attackers killed by gunshots near the governor’s office.

He said the group wore traditional magical fetishes and had

attempted to hoist the flag of Katanga’s short-lived 1960s-era

independent republic before members of the army’s elite

Republican Guard launched a counter-attack against them.

“They came out of nowhere,” said the witness, who said he

had seen around 300 gunmen. “Then they just vanished.”

Soldiers continued to occupy important locations throughout

the city in the late afternoon as traffic began to circulate

again.

Millions have died in the vast former Belgian colony’s

long-simmering armed conflicts, but – with fighting concentrated

in the country’s eastern borderlands – the mining areas around

Lubumbashi have remained relatively calm.

Katanga now hosts many international mining companies,

including Freeport McMoRan and commodities trader

Glencore, and exports around half a million tonnes of

copper each year.

Unidentified gunmen attacked Lubumbashi’s airport last

August – the second attack on the facility in two years –

killing at least one soldier as government forces repelled the

offensive after several hours of fighting.