Congo war goes regional
Conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo has erupted again over the last several weeks, continuing an ongoing war that has left more than five million people dead. But now, as many times before in Congo’s rather dreary history, the region is getting sucked in. Human Rights Watch reports today that Ugandan rebels from the ...
Conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo has erupted again over the last several weeks, continuing an ongoing war that has left more than five million people dead. But now, as many times before in Congo's rather dreary history, the region is getting sucked in.
Conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo has erupted again over the last several weeks, continuing an ongoing war that has left more than five million people dead. But now, as many times before in Congo’s rather dreary history, the region is getting sucked in.
Human Rights Watch reports today that Ugandan rebels from the Lord’s Resistance Army are now pillaging northeastern Congo. Zimbabwean and Angolan troops are reported to be involved, too. Bravo to Angolan peacekeepers, who have volunteered for the ongoing U.N. mission there, but the whole thing harkens ominously to the late 1990s, a time when Angolan troops supported the Congolese government against Zimbabwean and Namibian troops in country.
In other words, neighbors of this conflict cannot be assumed innocent.
The stakes are high. Even in comparison to the last decade of Congo’s history, today’s conflict is worrisome. An already desperate humanitarian situation is now dire, as this week’s photo essay demonstrates. UNHCR already reports that 250,000 people have fled their homes in the last two months, bringing the total displaced to 800,000. Camps are unsafe, and UNHCR is trying desperately to relocate 60,000 civilians from the front lines. At least 1,000 cases of cholera have been reported in over a month’s time — countless more no doubt go unrecorded.
The big picture: power-sharing is eroding in Zimbabwe, South African politics are a mess, and the West is in no mood to help. A regional conflict in Congo is the last thing Africa needs.
Photo: Uriel Sinai/Getty Images
Elizabeth Dickinson is International Crisis Group’s senior analyst for Colombia.
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