Polish tourist jailed for spying in DRC released

epa11316931 The lawyers of 11 soldiers on trial sit in a military court waiting for the verdict in Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo, 03 May 2024. The military court handed a death sentence to eight soldiers, including five officers, for ‘cowardice’ and ‘flight from the enemy’ when fighting M23 rebels, the three others were acquitted. The soldiers were based at an army position close to the strategic town of Sake, 20 kilometers from Goma, the capital of North Kivu. The Congolese government announced on 13 March 2024 the resumption of executions, particularly against soldiers accused of treason. EPA/MOISE KASEREKA Dostawca: PAP/EPA.

The Polish government said Tuesday that a Polish man sentenced to life in prison for espionage in the Democratic Republic of Congo had been released and was back in Europe.

Poland’s president intervened in the case of the 52-year-old detained in the central African nation, whom the foreign ministry described as an avid traveller.

“Mariusz Majewski, the Pole wrongfully convicted and detained in the Democratic Republic of Congo, is now safe in Europe,” Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

“This morning we finally got to talk,” he added, along with a video clip of the phone conversation.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Pawel Wronski told reporters that Majewski was at Poland’s consulate in Brussels.

The foreign ministry announced on Friday that Majewski had been sentenced to life in jail for espionage in the vast country long rocked by instability.

Polish media reported that Majewski had been accused of taking photos of sensitive facilities, secretly observing military activities and approaching the DR Congo frontline in its battle with militant groups.

The reports added that Majewski was a longtime traveller who had visited all 193 member states of the United Nations, including North Korea.

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