HUMAN RIGHTS
WATCH Human Rights News PortuguesFrancaisRussianGerman
EspanolChineseArabicOther Languages
   

Congo: Ituri Civilians Need U.N. Protection

(New York, March 19, 2002) -- The U.N. Organization Mission in Congo (MONUC) should immediately send more military and civilian observers to the strife-torn Ituri province in northeastern Congo, Human Rights Watch said today in a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

Also Available in

french 

Related Material

Letter to U.N. Secretary General Annan
Letter, March 18, 2002

DR Congo: Scores Killed in New Ethnic Fighting
Press Release, February 13, 2002

Attacks on Civilians in Ugandan Occupied Areas in Northeastern Congo
Background Briefing, February 13, 2002

The latest flare-up of the deadly interethnic conflict between Hemas and Lendus has resulted in hundreds of civilian killings and the displacement of thousands.  
 
From the onset of the conflict in 1999 to the current spiral of killings, leadership disputes within the splinter Congolese Rally for Democracy-Liberation Movement (RCD-ML) and manipulation by the occupying Uganda army have combined to stoke the violence, Human Rights Watch said.  
 
To dissuade the RCD-ML and Ugandans from causing more harm to unprotected civilians, and thus help in mitigating the conflict, the letter recommended that, under the terms of its current mandate, MONUC should send more military and civilian observers to the region to monitor the behavior of militia forces on the ground. Given the rapidly deteriorating situation, Human Rights Watch also called on the office of the Secretary-General and the Security Council to increase political pressure on all parties to the Lusaka Ceasefire Agreement so the governmental actors will more likely insist that local forces under their sway also adopt the necessary measures to end abuses against civilians.

HRW Logo Contribute to Human Rights Watch

Home | About Us | News Releases | Publications | Info by Country | Global Issues | Campaigns | What You Can Do | Community | Bookstore | Film Festival | Search | Site Map | Contact Us | Press Contacts | Privacy Policy

© Copyright 2004, Human Rights Watch    350 Fifth Avenue, 34th Floor    New York, NY 10118-3299    USA