In 2017, "state agents" carried out 1,176 extra-judicial killings, "including at least 89 women and 213 children," the United Nations Mission in Congo (MONUSCO) said in an annual report on human rights violations in the DRC yesterday.
Such killings have tripled over the past two years, MONUSCO said, adding that it condemned the increase.
The armed forces accounted for nearly two-thirds - 64 percent - of extra-judicial killings by state agents, it said.
Across the country, a total of 6,497 violations and abuses - committed not just by state agents but also by armed groups - were recorded in 2017.
A sprawling, mineral-rich country in central Africa, the DRC is in the grip of several conflicts, including political and ethnic unrest as well as violence by militia groups.
The rise in arbitrary killings last year is mainly explained by the "persistent crisis" in three provinces constituting the Kasai region, where at least 752 people were executed, the report said.
Violence in Kasai erupted after a tribal chieftain known as the Kamwina Nsapu, who rebelled against the regime of President Joseph Kabila, was killed in August 2016.
The Kamwina Nsapu's militia was responsible for the death of at least 79 civilians, including seven women and nine children, the report said.
Another militia, the Bana Mura, sometimes operating with the support of army soldiers, killed at least 67 civilians, including nine women and 21 children, it added.
Two UN experts were killed last March while investigating violence in Kasai, where the United Nations has counted more than 80 mass graves.
The rise in extra-judicial killings comes as the government has cracked down on a number of anti-government demonstrations across the country.
Scores were injured and dozens arrested when security forces opened fire on the Catholic Church-organised rally.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday called for "credible investigations" into the killings.
Congolese authorities have "systematically resorted to unjustified and disproportionate restrictions to fundamental freedoms and acts of harassment" of political opponents, journalists and human rights activists in an attempt to "silence the voices seen as critics", the MONUSCO report stated.
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