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9 peacekeepers killed in Congo, U.N. says
Gunmen killed nine U.N. Bangladeshi peacekeeping troops Friday in an ambush in northeastern Congo, the deadliest assault ever on the 6-year-old mission trying to shepherd the nation out of the chaos of a civil war that left some 3 million dead.
The attack occurred near the town of Kafe as 21 Bangladeshi peacekeepers were patrolling in the area of a camp housing families displaced by persistent fighting in Congo's lawless Ituri province, U.N. spokesman Mamadou Bah said.
The United Nations sent an attack helicopter and a rapid reaction force, but bad weather limited their effectiveness, Demange said.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan condemned the "reprehensible and criminal attack" and called on Congo's transitional government to bring the killers to justice, his spokesman Fred Eckhard said in New York.
Annan said the Congo peacekeeping mission would not be deterred from carrying out its mandate.
The peacekeepers had arrived in Kafe, 20 miles northwest of the provincial capital of Bunia, on Jan. 23 to help secure and feed and administer medicine to people who'd fled the fighting.
"These blue helmets were out there protecting people, and they got ambushed while doing it," Bah said, referring to the helmets worn by peacekeepers.
Some 15,000 peacekeepers from 100 countries — the world's largest peacekeeping deployment — are overseeing a transition toward peace in Congo, where a 1998-2002 war launched by foreign-backed rebels drew in armies from six nations and killed an estimated 3 million people, most through strife-induced hunger and disease.
The number will increase to 16,700 troops by March. About 4,800 U.N. forces are in Ituri.
While most of the nation has eased into calm, fighting between tribal factions continues in Ituri, making the mineral-rich region the greatest challenge to the U.N. mission. Several years of peace talks, arrests of militia commanders and even a 2003 European Union military operation led by the French army hasn't stopped the violence.
Attacks have killed dozens in Kafe, which is in a vast, remote region, since December. Most of the killings are blamed on militia of the ethnic Lendu, who target members of the Hema tribe. The tribal rivalry has been fueled by the influx of arms from Congo's five-year war and by outsiders vying for Ituri's mineral wealth.
Since 1999, fighting in the northeastern district of Ituri has killed more than 50,000 and forced 500,000 to flee their homes, U.N. officials and human rights groups say.
The United Nations also suspects Lendu militia are responsible for kidnapping 34 women and children in the nearby village of Che in late January. Most are still missing.
The identity of Friday's attackers, who wore no uniforms, was not known. Suspicion fell on Lendu militia belonging to the group Patriotic Force of Resistance in Ituri, responsible for several massacres in the region.
The group's former commander, Germain Katanga, was recently made a general in the Congolese army through a 2003 power-sharing agreement that ended the civil war.
The Ituri conflict came amid Congo's larger war and the transitional government has struggled to extend its authority to the long-ungoverned east. Prior to Friday's killings, 45 U.N. peacekeeping personnel had been killed in the Congo mission since 1999, according to the United Nations. U.N. peacekeepers frequently have been targeted on missions around the world. Among the deadliest attacks came in Somalia, on June 5, 1993, when 24 Pakistani soldiers were killed in an ambush as they checked a weapons storage site. Ten Belgian peacekeepers were slain at the start of the Rwanda genocide on April 7, 1994. |
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