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DR Congo survivors recount nightmare of ethnic massacre

FILE PHOTO: Congolese woman feeds her son child at a clinic for displaced in Bunia.

Bunia, DR Congo | AFP | The assailants were methodical. They came in waves. First came the ones who killed. Then came the ones who torched homes. And finally, the ones who looted anything of value.

Ahead of them, terrorised villagers fled for their lives — the latest victims of the ethnic conflict that bedevils Ituri, the troubled northeastern province of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The bloodshed is part of a cycle of violence between the Hema and Lendu communities, cattle herders and farmers who have long fought over land — a conflict that has recently intensified as DR Congo struggles over its future.

At least 49 people were killed last week, bringing the death toll since mid-December to more than 100, while 200,000 people have fled their homes, according to estimates by humanitarian workers.

Many of them are women, frequently targeted for sexual assault, and children.

“The attackers were organised in three groups,” said Francoise Malosi, 54, recalling an attack on the Lendu village of Blukwa early last month.

“The first line was young men, armed with machetes, spears and arrows, and they were the ones who cut people’s throats,” she said at the Bigo medical centre in Bunia.

“After them was a group which set fire to people’s homes, and after that, there was a group which stole cattle and things of value,” she said.

“We fled into the bush, and spent three days sheltering there.”

– Flight into danger –

Doctors without Borders (MSF) last week said that in the previous month, around 40,000 people had fled across Lake Albert to neighbouring Uganda and 20,000 to Bunia, the capital of Ituri.

The Bigo medical centre is struggling with the human influx.

Nurse Baseke Kazimoto said the facility has treated 1,900 displaced people since February 9, including 450 pregnant women, 20 of whom have given birth.

At Lake Albert, the misery is complete. People fleeing the violence are crossing by canoe — a trip that takes between six and 10 hours and is filled with danger. Some have drowned, witnesses say.

Those arriving gather at Sebarogo in Hoima district, where about 1,000 people have fallen sick with cholera, causing 30 deaths, MSF said last Wednesday.

In Bunia, most of those displaced are living with host families. About 2,000 are holed up in tents around the regional hospital — six toilets and four showers are currently available for them, and more are being built.

There, a woman with five children, who had lost her husband, tried to build a shelter.

“I came from a village called Che, where attackers burned all our homes. We walked for three days — we have been sleeping outdoors, exposed to the mosquitoes, the rain and cold.”

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