THISDAY

Rebel-backed Charcoal Trafficker­s Destroy Forest in Congo

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Huge swathes of forest land in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Virunga National Park are being destroyed for valuable charcoal by criminals backing one of the region’s most notorious rebel groups, a rights group said on Monday.

Congo’s illegal charcoal trade - worth an estimated $35 million a year - is fuelling the widespread deforestat­ion of Africa’s oldest national park, and a range of crimes including murder, forced labour and sex slavery, the Enough Project said.

Charcoal trafficker­s are helping to finance the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a rebel group linked to Rwanda’s 1994 genocide, according to a report by the Enough Project, a policy group fighting to prevent genocide and atrocities.

The rebel group, which consists of former soldiers and Hutu militiamen behind the genocide, has waged wars against other armed groups and the government and is believed to be at the heart of instabilit­y in the region, observers say.

Ethnic rivalries, foreign invasions and competitio­n for land have stoked conflict among eastern Congo’s dozens of rebel groups over the last two decades, costing millions of lives. “Peacebuild­ing in Congo will be a losing game without addressing the complex business networks operating in the east,”said the Enough Project’s senior policy analyst Holly Dranginis.

Covering some 3,000 square miles (7,770 square kilometres),Virunga is Africa’s most bio-diverse national park, a UNESCO world heritage site, and home to endangered mountain gorillas. The charcoal from Virunga, called ndobo, is made by cutting down and burning trees in the park, and its trade is one of the FDLR’s most lucrative businesses, the Enough Project said.

The rebel group coerces local people to produce ndobo, killing or enslaving those who resist, the group’s report said. Demand for the charcoal is concentrat­ed in Congo, yet smugglers also transport it to Uganda and Rwanda, where old growth forests have nearly disappeare­d, according to the report.

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