Congo’s mass killing fields

Zephirin Sinamenye thought his 12- year-old-son, Maisha, was hiding safely as a hail of machine-gun fire swept across the town of Kiwanja in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. He was wrong.

Maisha was caught by a stray bullet on Nov. 5 as rebel fighters led by renegade general Laurent Nkunda clashed with pro-government militias and then executed dozens of civilians, witnesses in the village said.

“My boy is still in the field where they killed him,” said Sinamenye, 51, standing behind a house to avoid a rebel patrol. “It’s not safe for me to go and see him.”

As Sinamenye spoke, thousands of residents of Kiwanja, 75 kilometers (45 miles) north of Goma, the provincial capital, fled. Long lines of people bearing rolled-up mattresses and pots and pans, some with goats in tow, headed south.

For the quarter of a million people displaced in North Kivu since August, the fighting has followed a relentless cycle since the 1994 genocide in neighboring Rwanda, when extremist ethnic Hutus slaughtered more than 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus. The 1997 end of President Mobutu Sese Seko’s three-decade rule over what was then Zaire, and the current government’s inability to address the strife, has left a hollow state where armed groups stir up ethnic tensions to rally support.

“This killing isn’t new,” said Sinamenye, wearing a soiled white shirt, gray slacks and black rubber flip-flops. “People have been coming here to kill for a long, long time.”

Tutsis, Hutus

The widening of Congo’s ethnic divide testifies to the use of tribal chauvinism by politicians and warlords battling to control a country the size of Western Europe, according to Onesphore Sematumba, a researcher at the Goma-based Pole Institute. “Many people still think of their ethnicity first and then their national identity,” he said.

For Sinamenye, a father of eight, the killing started in 1996, when Tutsi-led fighters from both Congo and Rwanda hacked his neighbors to death with machetes in Ntamugenga, a nearby village he had settled in because of its fertile soil. He fled with his family to Kiwanja, where he farmed beans, corn and peanuts on the outskirts of the town.

An ethnic Hutu, Sinamenye said there is little difference between Nkunda’s fighters and the original rebellion that helped Laurent Kabila, President Joseph Kabila’s father and predecessor, overthrow Mobutu.

Then and Now

“It was Tutsis who attacked us then and it’s Tutsis who are attacking us now,” he said.

Nkunda, who is also a Seventh-Day Adventist lay preacher, led his forces to within 10 kilometers of Goma by Oct. 29. His fighters overwhelmed Congo’s army despite the presence of over 5,000 United Nations peacekeepers in North Kivu. Nkunda, who said in the past that his National Congress for the Defense of the People, or CNDP, was essentially trying to protect his Tutsi minority, now speaks of the “total liberation” of Congo.

“I have national ambitions,” Nkunda, dressed in army fatigues and wielding a cane capped with a silver eagle’s head, said in a Nov. 13 interview near the border with Uganda. “Where we are is the safest in Congo. If we can do that, we are capable of doing it on a national level.”

New York-based Human Rights Watch and witnesses such as Sinamenye dispute Nkunda’s contention and say his soldiers executed tens of civilians in Kiwanja in November.

Write a Comment
CAPTCHA Code Image
Type in image code
Change the code
 Receive China Post promos Respond to this email
Congo’s mass killing fields
Displaced Congolese gather at the Ishasha refugee transit camp on the Congo Uganda border Sunday, Nov. 30. The U.N. refugee agency UNHCR has warned that disease could break out ...

Enlarge Photo
china post
Subscribe  |   Advertise  |   RSS Feed  |   About Us  |   Career  |   Contact Us
Sitemap  |   Top Stories  |   Taiwan  |   China  |   Business  |   Asia  |   World  |   Sports  |   Life  |   Arts & Leisure  |   Health  |   Editorial  |   Commentary
Travel  |   Movies  |   TV Guide  |   Classifieds  |   Bookstore  |   Getting Around  |   Weather  |   Guide Post  |   Student Post  |   English Courses  |   Terms of Use  |   Sitemap