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11/04/2004
Fears rise of wider conflict in Congo drawing in African neighbors
MULTIMEDIA:
An audio slideshow about children in a hospital in Rutshuru,
Congo, narrated by photographer Jerome Delay.
By MICHELLE FAUL and TODD PITMAN
GOMA,
Congo (AP) – Congo's warring rivals traded accusations
Tuesday that Angola, Zimbabwe and Rwanda are mobilizing forces
to fight in Congo, as the prime minister flew into this besieged
city to assess weeks of fighting that has displaced a quarter
million people.
The accusations of foreign involvement, reminiscent of a
disastrous 1998-2002 war that drew in eight African nations,
stoked fears of a wider conflict in this mineral-rich nation.
The fighting has forced tens of thousands of refugees to
struggle through the countryside with what belongings they
can carry. Tropical rainstorms, which drench eastern Congo
every day, add to their misery.
On Tuesday, downpours sent refugees lucky enough to have
shelter rushing to tents and huts made of woven banana leaves,
while others huddled under plastic sheeting as they trudged
through the thick red mud.
In Kibati, a camp for the displaced just north of Goma,
aid workers from Los Angeles-based International Medical
Corps gave water and high-energy biscuits to thousands of
hungry children lined up in the searing heat.
Outside the distribution center, thousands of children who
had not received the tokens needed to receive food shoved
and pushed, holding their hands out in supplication, eyes
wide with desperation.
"The people here don't have food and they are hungry," said
Oxfam's Rebecca Wynn. "Some people are going into the
banana fields around the camp, which is very dangerous because
there are drunk soldiers around. They're risking their lives,
but they are hungry and desperate."
Prime Minister Adolphe Muzito arrived in Goma just before
dusk Tuesday with half his Cabinet and met with U.N. envoy
Alan Doss and U.N. peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy as well
as local officials. He planned to meet with refugees Wednesday
to assess the humanitarian crisis in the region.
Despite a week-old cease-fire, rebel leader Laurent Nkunda's
Rwandan-backed rebels vowed insurgents would march on the
capital, Kinshasa, after the government refused Nkunda's
demand for direct talks.
"If they won't negotiate with us, then they leave us
little choice," rebel spokesman Bertrand Bisimwa said. "We
will start fighting again and we will continue until we take
Kinshasa."
Communications Minister Lambert Mende said President Joseph
Kabila's administration was "open for dialogue" with
all rebel and militia groups in the region _ but would not
meet Nkunda's group alone.
The Congo government's first priority is to "normalize
our relations with all our neighbors, above all Rwanda," Mende
added.
Suggestions that other African nations are being drawn into
the conflict have fueled fears of a wider conflict, adding
urgency to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's attempts
to bring Kabila and Rwandan President Paul Kagame together
for talks. Kagame is believed to wield strong influence over
the Tutsi-led rebels.
A U.N. official said Ban was considering leaving Wednesday
for an expected African Union summit meeting Thursday on
the Congo crisis in Nairobi, Kenya, to be attended by Kagame
and Kabila. The official spoke on condition of anonymity
because no official announcement has been made.
The rebels on Tuesday accused close Congo ally Angola and
Zimbabwe of mobilizing to back government forces against
the Tutsi fighters, while the government _ backed by reports
from U.N. peacekeepers _ has said Rwanda is helping the insurgents.
The groundwork "is being laid for a generalized war
in the region ... foreign troops (are) preparing to make
war against us," rebel spokesman Bisimwa told The Associated
Press.
Zimbabwe has strongly denied any military involvement, while
Angola did not comment.
The conflict in eastern Congo can be traced to festering
ethnic hatreds left over from the 1994 Rwandan genocide that
killed a half-million Tutsis and sent more than a million
refugees spilling across the border.
Rwanda invaded Congo twice in the 1990s to hunt down Hutu
militiamen who fled there after taking part in the mass slaughter.
The 1998-2002 war ripped Congo into rival fiefdoms, with
rebels backed by Uganda and Rwanda controlling vast swaths
of territory rich in coffee, gold and tin. Angola and Zimbabwe
sent tanks and fighter planes to back Congo's government
in exchange for access to lucrative diamond and copper mines
to the south and west.
Though Rwanda has denied any military involvement in the
latest fighting, the U.N. says Uruguayan peacekeepers saw
Rwandan artillery fire into Congo last week as Nkunda's forces
advanced. Uruguayan army chief Gen. Jorge Rosales said intelligence
reports indicated Rwandan troops were already "integrated
in the rebel forces."
The rebels, meanwhile, claimed Tuesday that some Angolan
troops were in Bukavu, south of Goma. They said 550 Angolan
commandos were in Goma and others were in the central city
of Kisangani. It was impossible to verify the claims.
Further complicating matters were the nearly two dozen small
militia groups operating in Congo's lawless east, which the
government and U.N. peacekeepers have struggled to secure
for years.
Fighting erupted Tuesday between one of these, the pro-government
Mai Mai, and the rebels north of Goma, U.N. spokeswoman Sylvie
van den Wildenberg said. Uruguayan and Indian peacekeepers
were caught in the crossfire at Kiwanja, but there were no
reports of casualties.
At the International Criminal Court in the Netherlands,
meanwhile, prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo said Tuesday he
was monitoring reports of war crimes in the Congo, including
murders, rapes, attacks on civilians and looting. The perpetrators "will
not go unpunished," he said.
Ross Mountain, the U.N. humanitarian envoy to Congo, told
the AP the U.N. mission has pulled peacekeepers out of other
trouble spots in Congo and has concentrated 92 percent of
its 17,000-force in the east.
But at only one peacekeeper for every 10,000 civilians,
the force was vastly unmanned, he said, noting that the Kosovo
mission had 46,000 U.N. troops for an area 200 times smaller.
Neil Campbell of the Brussels-based independent think tank,
International Crisis Group, said diplomatic efforts must
be swift.
"The worst case scenario would be regional escalation
with Rwanda getting heavily involved," Campbell said. "And
that's something that we want to avoid at all costs."
In Kiwanja on Tuesday, AP reporters watched hundreds trudging
home from refugee camps they said they were forced to leave
by Nkunda's rebels.
U.N. spokeswoman Michele Montas said Nkunda's rebels blocked
at least 100 refugee families attempting to return to Tongo,
a village on the edge of the Virunga National Park that shelters
endangered mountain guerrillas. Montas said the refugees
were forced to sleep beside the road with no shelter.
___
Associated Press writers Michelle Faul reported from Goma
and Todd Putman from Dakar, Senegal. AP writers Anita Powell
in Goma, Eddy Isango in Kinshasa, Donna Bryson in Johannesburg,
South Africa, and Louise Watt in London contributed to this
report.
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