In the statement, signed by Jean Claude Nzita, spokesperson for FLEC-Armed Forces of Cabinda, the enclave's independence supporters added that the bodies were "completely charred" and that the village coordinator and five other people "were inexplicably and arbitrarily detained by Angolan soldiers".
"FLEC-FAC vehemently denounces the extreme brutality and unacceptable repression exercised by the regime (of the President of Angola) João Lourenço (...) against civilians in the villages of Kisungu and Ntando-Maselele" after two attacks carried out by the Armed Forces of Cabinda on 3 and 13 March.
The guerrilla movement accuses the Angolan regime of having carried out "extrajudicial executions and systematic torture" against civilians, who were allegedly "beaten with electric cables and iron bars", subjected them to detention in secret locations and threatened with death and deprived of food and water.
"FLEC-FAC calls on the UN Secretary-General and former Portuguese Prime Minister António Guterres, who has in-depth knowledge of the situation in Cabinda, to take urgent measures to protect and support the civilians of Cabinda and to pay special attention to the populations" of the two villages mentioned who, it reiterates, "are being victims of Angolan military repression".
The guerrillas have been demanding for several years the independence of the territory of Cabinda, the province from which much of the country's oil comes, invoking the Treaty of Simulambuco, of 1885, which designates that territorial portion as a Portuguese protectorate, claiming that the enclave is not an integral part of Angolan territory.