JUST IN: Three Americans are accused of being involved in a failed coup attempt in Congo that left multiple people dead.
According to the Democratic Republic of Congo military, they stopped an attempted coup near the presidential palace.
Among the 50 people who were involved were three Americans who have been arrested.
A passport for one of these Americans is now spreading online, a 36-year-old U.S. citizen born in Maryland. (WaPo)
US ambassador to Congo, Lucy Tamlyn has acknowledged the involvement of US citizens in a recent statement.
The coup was allegedly led by US-based Congolese politician Christian Malanga.
He was killed at the presidential palace after he resisted arrest.
In 1991, Metallica performed in Moscow at a military airfield just a few months prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union. The event was part of the 'Monsters of Rock' festival, featuring bands like AC/DC and Pantera.
With a staggering attendance of over 1.6 million people, the concert set a record at that time and was hailed as a symbol of democracy and freedom.
Metallica was enjoying immense success thanks to their critically acclaimed album known as the Black Album, and one of their popular hits, "Enter Sandman," was performed during the show.
Reflecting on the experience years later, Metallica's lead singer, James Hetfield, remarked, "Actually, I would have to say the Russian show when we showed up in '91 after the coup, where the country had opened up and was no longer communist. Doing that open airfield, we played with four other bands, and basically, for the first time, it was a free concert out in an airfield, and they estimated a million, or half a million, nobody knew really. But just being able to play in a place that was just fresh and hadn't heard anything like that before really, and just watching people change as the music moved them. There were plenty of military people that just started taking their uniforms off and started rocking out. It was a really freeing thing, so it was awesome to witness that."
It's worth mentioning that only two other bands have achieved greater concert attendance numbers. Rod Stewart's concert in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, in 1994, drew approximately 3.4 million people, while Jean Michel Jarre's concert in 1997 amassed a staggering 3.5 million fans.