The Star Malaysia

Killings flare up in Congo after 15 years of relative peace

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KYANGWALI ( Uganda): Nguna Abooki was getting ready for bed on the evening of Feb 1 when men with machetes and guns ambushed his village in eastern Congo, killing two of his children and three of his brothers.

“They cut them using pangas (machetes). Others were shot,” said Abooki, a 42yearold fisherman whose words were separated by long pauses as he recalled the violence. “I don’t know why they targeted us.”

Abooki, an ethnic Hema, identified the attackers as members of the Lendu ethnic group, farmers who have clashed with Hema herders over cattle grazing rights, crops and gold mining in the Ituri region.

After 15 years of relative peace, there has been a surge in violence between Lendu and Hema this year, driven in part by a breakdown of government authority.

President Joseph Kabila’s refusal to leave power at the end of his mandate in 2016 has undermined the legitimacy of the state in the eyes of many Congolese.

Ituri was one of the places where Congo’s civil war began in 1998, sucking in troops from Uganda and Rwanda, fuelling a fiveyear conflict in which about five million people were killed, mostly from hunger and disease.

With a resurgence of ethnic strife in the region, and a large refugee exodus of Hema to Uganda, there are fears of history repeating itself, experts say.

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court has convicted warlords from both sides of the Ituri fighting, but that has not prevented further violence.

Clashes between Lendu and Hema since February have left at least 70 dead and forced more than 60,000 to flee, bringing the total number of Congolese refugees in Uganda to over a quarter of a million.

After gruelling journeys, the refugees are starting to share their stories. Seven refugees interviewe­d by Reuters have given some of the first accounts of mass killings they said had been carried out by Lendu fighters.

Abooki’s journey to Uganda began immediatel­y after seeing his family members slaughtere­d. In the confusion of the attack, he and his wife escaped but were separated in the darkness.

Fearing for his life, he caught a boat across Lake Albert into Uganda and arrived the following morning.

The route across the 40kmwide lake has become a wellworn but

treacherou­s path – four refugees died when their overloaded canoe capsized in February.

Lendu fighters have attacked Hema as they fled for the lake, refugees said.

The United Nations refugee agency UNHCR expects 200,000 refugees to reach Uganda from Ituri this year.

On arrival in Uganda, refugees are processed in a former fishweighi­ng station on the banks of the lake.

They are then sent by bus 30km through dense forest and a wildlife reserve to the Kyangwali refugee camp, 240km northwest of the Ugandan capital, Kampala.

Their feet are sprayed with disinfecta­nt before they are allowed to enter the camp, whose ground has been churned to mud by heavy rains.

Clean water and food are hard to come by. In the last two months, 32 refugees have died from acute diarrhoea, the UNHCR said.

For the refugees interviewe­d at the camp, it is still better than home.

Lendu groups typically attack Hema villages shortly after dusk.

They come with guns, machetes, axes and bows and arrows, refugees said. Homes are torched.

 ?? — AFP ?? Deadly cycle: A Congolese woman walking through a camp for Internally Displaced Persons amid renewed violence in Kalemie, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
— AFP Deadly cycle: A Congolese woman walking through a camp for Internally Displaced Persons amid renewed violence in Kalemie, Democratic Republic of the Congo.

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