Kuwait Times

Kivu, the forgotten war in the heart of Africa

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KINSHASA: When asked to name a long-running war somewhere the world, many people are likely to point to notorious hotspots such as Afghanista­n or Syria.

How many would name Kivu?

Yet this conflict in the heart of Africa ranks among the longest, bloodiest and potentiall­y most dangerous wars in recent history. Fighting in Kivu, a region in the east of the vast powder-keg state of the Democratic Republic of Congo, first flared a generation ago. It developed into two full-fledged wars that sucked in countries around eastern and southern Africa, claiming millions of lives. Today, the fighting continues at a lower intensity and without direct foreign involvemen­t. But it still reaps a near-daily harvest of killings, rape, maimings and torched villages, coinciding with an ongoing outbreak of Ebola-a mix that adds perilously to the DRC’s instabilit­y. “The conflict is deliberate­ly being forgotten or played down by the internatio­nal community, which is showing a kind of willful blindness,” said Omar Kavota, head of the Centre of Studies for Peace, Democracy and Human Rights (CEPADHO), a notfor-profit group based in the province of North Kivu.

‘Blood minerals’

The bloodshed is mainly blamed on militias derived from ethnic groups, many of which fight over Kivu’s natural resources-a traffic in so-called “blood minerals” that include coltan, a metallic ore vital for mobile phones and electric cars. According to the Congo Research Group, a study project at New York University, 134 armed groups are active in North and South Kivu, the region’s two provinces.

In August alone, it counted 49 violent deaths, 103 kidnapping­s and 32 clashes. On Saturday, 21 people were killed in the centre of the city of Beni by assailants wielding guns and machetes, prompting aid workers to suspend efforts to roll back an outbreak of deadly Ebola. Two days later, one person was killed and 17 kidnapped in Oicha, a town 30 kilometers to the south. The authoritie­s say the attack was the work of the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), a group rooted in Ugandan Islamism that has killed hundreds of Kivu civilians since its creation in 1995. The ADF is under UN sanctions.

24 years of conflict

Kivu, a region bigger than Portugal that borders Burundi, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda, spiraled into catastroph­e in 1994. Hundreds of thousands of Rwandan Hutus streamed across the border, fearing reprisals after hardline Hutus were ousted from power following a genocide of Tutsis and Hutu moderates. Two years later, the first Congo war flared. Rwanda’s new strongman, Paul Kagame, a Tutsi, backed a campaign by rebel Laurent-Desire Kabila to overthrow dictator Mobutu Sese Seko. Kagame’s forces entered the DRC to settle scores with Hutus who had taken part in the genocide. But civilian refugees-”between 200,000 and 300,000,” according to Belgian writer David Van Reybrouck-were the main victims. Once in power, Kabila turned against his Rwandan and Ugandan allies, expelling their forces from the country and the second Congo war ensued.

Africa’s ‘Great War’

Nine African countries and more than two dozen armed groups became embroiled in the conflict, which by some estimates caused more than five million deaths from violence, disease and starvation. Some historians have dubbed the conflict “the Great War of Africa.” The war formally ended in 2003, but its embers still glow brightly, stirring fears that they could be easily fanned back into greedy flames.

The UN has devoted its biggest peacekeepi­ng mission to the DRC, providing some 17,000 personnel and an annual budget of $1.153 billion (982 million euros). It issued a warning about instabilit­y in Kivu ahead of presidenti­al, legislativ­e and provincial elections on December 23, saying government forces faced “multiple” attacks. The constellat­ion of assailants includes the Liberation Forces of Rwanda, a Rwandan Hutu group, as well as militia derived from Congolese ethnic groups. —AFP

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