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    More than 1,000 killed in eastern Congo: report

    MORE MONUC: A coalition of 84 organizations says Rwandan Hutu militiamen are killing indiscriminately and UN peacekeepers must do more to protect civilians

    AP , JOHANNESBURG
    Thursday, Oct 15, 2009, Page 6

    More than 1,000 civilians have been killed and nearly 900,000 displaced in eastern Congo by Rwandan Hutu militiamen and Congolese forces since January, humanitarian groups say in a new report.

    The report, released on Tuesday by a coalition of 84 organizations, said that many of the killings were carried out by Rwandan Hutu militiamen. Congolese government soldiers have also targeted civilians, the report said.

    A Congolese military operation has been aimed at forcing out the Rwandan Hutu militiamen, many of whom sought refuge in neighboring Congo after participating in Rwanda¡¦s 1994 genocide that killed more than 500,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu.

    But the groups said the military operation, which is backed by a UN peacekeeping force, known as MONUC, is not doing enough to protect civilians in the region.

    ¡§The human rights and humanitarian consequences of the current military operation are simply disastrous,¡¨ said Marcel Stoessel of Oxfam.

    MONUC has backed the Congolese army in eastern Congo since March following a joint Congolese and Rwandan operation against the Rwandan Hutu militiamen.

    Jean-Paul Dietrich, military spokesman for MONUC, said the UN was working hard to protect civilians in the region.

    ¡§We are in conversations with the government, who knows our position on this subject ¡X the officers who have committed these crimes cannot participate in the army and should be tried by the international or national judicial systems,¡¨ he said.

    However, UN officials have said that they simply do not have enough boots on the ground to perform effectively in Congo, a country that is bigger than Western Europe but with only 500km of paved roads.

    The 3,000 additional UN peacekeepers authorized by the Security Council last November are only just arriving in the region, the report said.

    ¡§The UN needs to make it clear that if the Congolese government wants its continued military support, the army should remove abusive soldiers from command positions and its soldiers should stop attacking civilians,¡¨ said Anneke Van Woudenberg, senior researcher at Human Rights Watch.

    The report said that many of the killings have been carried out by the Rwandan Hutu militiamen ¡§targeting civilians to punish them for their government¡¦s decision to launch military operations against the group.¡¨

    Congolese government soldiers also have targeted civilians through killings and widespread rape, looting, forced labor, and arbitrary arrests, the report said.

    The report also said that 7,000 women and girls have been raped and more than 6,000 homes have been burned down in North and South Kivu provinces.

    The 84 groups in the coalition behind the report include ActionAid, Human Rights Watch, International Crisis Group and Oxfam.
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