Congo Kinshasa
Uganda blamed for massacres in north-east Congo Kinshasa

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afrol.com, 22 January - As it becomes clear that about 200 civilians have been killed in the Bunia district of north-east Congo Kinshasa (DRC), the rights group Human Rights Watch puts the blame on the Ugandan Government. They "must be held responsible for the security of the population and humanitarian workers in areas under its control," the organisation said today.

On 19 January, rival Lendu and Hema militias killed at least one hundred and fifty civilians in the northeastern Congo town of Bunia. After the massacre, heads were paraded around Bunia. "Vehicles went around town parading cut off heads that had been spiked on sticks - it was horrible," a rebel official told Reuters news agency. 

Militia of the Lendu and affiliated Ngiti people attacked near the Bunia airport at dawn, carrying to the provincial capital the violence which has taken scores of lives in villages to the south of Bunia in the last three weeks. One of their objectives was apparently to disable a Ugandan helicopter that had been used to attack them in the earlier conflicts. The militiamen, who attacked with bows and arrows and spears, were driven back by the Ugandans using heavy weapons. The Lendu and Ngiti militia then attacked Hema families in several residential areas, killing more than fifty and wounding another twenty. In reprisal killings later in the day, Hema militia wielding machetes searched houses in Lendu areas and killed more than one hundred people. 

Representatives of humanitarian organizations were reluctant to go to the assistance of victims because extremists have recently accused them of taking sides in the dispute or even of supplying arms to one of the rival groups. 

Some local observers believe that Ugandan support for the Hema, a local minority people related to the Hima people of Uganda, has aggravated the long-standing ethnic conflict. The two peoples have been in conflict over the fertile lands for generations, in a situation somewhat comparable to the Hutu and Tutsi further to the south. The Hema are traditionally pastoralist, while the Lendu are mainly farmers. 

According to early reports from local residents, Ugandan soldiers at first did nothing to stop the 19 January attacks and their commanding officer, Col. Edison Muzoora, failed to respond to pleas to halt the killing. Bunia residents belonging to none of the rival groups finally intervened to stop the slaughter. Only then or shortly after did Ugandan soldiers begin patrolling the streets to restore order. By that, at least 150 persons had been slaughtered. 

Bunia lies close to the Ugandan border. Human Righs Watch representative Alison Des Forges explains that "Uganda is one of six foreign governments that have intervened in the civil war in the Congo (DRC) where its troops now control a sizable portion of the northeast. Foreign troops should not be taking sides in Congo's civil war." He continues; "but if they are there, they should certainly not be complicit in attacks against civilians. The perpetrators should be apprehended and punished." 

Uganda denies stirring up trouble between the Lendu and Hema peoples. According to an Ugandan Government statement, there have been deployed additional troops around Bunia to restore the order and avoid further bloodspelling. 

The outbreak of violence in Bunia does not appear to be connected to the recent death of Congolese President Laurent Kabila and the transition of power to his son, Joseph Kabila. But it does further destabilize northeastern Congo at a time of uncertainty in the capital of Kinshasa.

Sources: Based on Human Rights Watch


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