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CONGO MUCH WORSE

As fighting continues between rebels and pro-government militia in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the humanitarian disaster continues to descend. In the past week tens of thousands have been forced to flee their homes and three refugee camps - holding 50,000 people - were also destroyed and found empty. This year alone, a quarter of a million have become refugees internally within Congo.

Conflict in the DR Congo however is nothing new (see Schnews 407). Casualties are higher than any conflict the world has seen since the Second World War; over 5 million people have been killed since 1988. The leader of the rebel faction, Laurent Nkunda Batware, was indicted for war crimes in 2005 and is under investigation by the International Criminal Court. The conflict has seen massive human rights abuses conducted by both the government and rebel forces.

While there has been international outrage about the West's lack of help with aid or peace-keeping forces, the fighting in Congo is often layered with racist, or plain idle, clichés of 'tribal conflict' - when in fact there is no focus on the West's complicity in it. Those responsible for perpetuating the conflict runs from the local militia to government officials through to international corporations.

Complex international linkages, legal and illegal, public and private, fuel the war economy and direct the political organisations that perpetrate the violence. The DR Congo contains a wealth of natural resources - gold, diamonds, coltan, cassiterite - sold to corporations such as Anglo-American, Standard Chartered Bank, De Beers and over a hundred others. Those who exploitatively control and profit from Congo's resources feed it to consumer markets: Each of us carries a slice of Congo - from the coltan in our mobile phones to the cassiterite used in consumer disposables such as tin cans.

* Support the Demonstration against humanitarian crisis in DR Congo tomorrow (Nov 8th) at 11am, starting at Manchester University, Oxford Road, marching to Peace Gardens outside Manchester Town Hall. Organised by Congolese in Manchester. Contact 07507438424 / 07960617309.
* See www.ncadc.org.uk
* See www.schnews.org.uk/sotw/congo.htm



 

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