Ethnic violence displaces 60,000 people in Congo
March 19, 2018 00:00:00
Many people fleeing from their homes following recent attacks by assailants in Bunia, Eastern Congo — Internet
BUNIA, Mar 18 (AP): The assailants attacked under cover of darkness, slaughtering Nguli Nzafi's wife and three children with machetes and arrows.
The 71-year-old, who also lost all 40 of his cattle in the violence, was forced to flee on foot some 90 kilometers (56 miles) to safety in the town of Bunia.
"I have lost everything because I no longer have my wife nor my children," he says. "I cannot eat nor sleep. I'm afraid that this fighting is as bad as the war in 1996-2002."
Violence between Nzafi's Hema community and the Lendu ethnic group in Congo's northeast has now killed at least 150 people and has forced more than 32,000 people to flee to Bunia, where humanitarian assistance is strained and the suffering are eager for improved conditions.
Another 28,000 have also fled into Uganda, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
There is a long history of tensions between the Lendu and Hema groups, whose ongoing battles since 1999 already have killed thousands and led the UN to deploy a peacekeeping force in the area. Much of it is rooted in economic tensions over land, as the Lendu historically have been farmers on stationery plots of land while the Hema have raised animals and moved throughout the year to good grazing areas.
Once those disputes erupted into violence, the cycle of tit-for-tat attacks caused a mounting death toll.
The instability here in Ituri province presents yet another challenge for the Congolese military and UN peacekeeping force who are already grappling with the threats posed by rebel groups, and with ongoing unrest in the Kasai provinces.