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  • 2
    Dec
    2012
    3:16pm, EST

    Congo's displaced fearful after attack on camp

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    A group of internally displaced Congolese gather in the Mugunga III IDP camp in the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo on December 2, 2012.

    UN refugee agency officials reported cases of looting and rape in an attack late on Saturday on a camp for people displaced by the fighting in eastern Congo, Agence France-Presse reports.

    On Sunday people in the Mugunga III camp, which lies about six miles west of Goma and is home to up to 35,000 displaced people, lined up to receive food aid.

    More photos from The Democratic Republic of Congo on PhotoBlog

    "What is the point of all this food if there is no-one here to protect us, and to stop them coming back?" one resident of the camp asked. 

    Rebel fighters pulled out of Goma on Saturday, raising hopes regional peace efforts could advance negotiations to end the insurgency.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    A boy shelters from the rain under a truck in the Mugunga III IDP camp on December 2, 2012.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    A man unloads sacks of food aid at the Mugunga III camp on December 2, 2012.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    A boy is apprehended by a policeman after he was accused of stealing a bag of salt in the Mugunga III IDP camp on December 2, 2012.

    Editor's note: The caption of the final photo was amended on December 3, 2012 after AFP - Getty Images issued a correction.

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    3 comments

    As previously reported, the Congo rebels really don't have a cause to rebel against. They merely like to shoot people, rape, extort and murder children because that way they can keep their cool camouflage uniforms and guns. Their promise to 'liberate' Goma fell short, because they have no idea how t …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: aid, africa, congo, world-news, displaced, goma, mugunga
  • 22
    Nov
    2012
    8:45pm, EST

    Congo army fights back, rebels hold Goma

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    M23 rebel fighters rush from Goma to the town of Sake to reinforce positions as residents of Sake flee with their belongings on the road between Goma and Sake in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, Nov. 22, 2012. Many of the fleeing residents stopped at an internally displaced person camp between Sake and Goma.

    Reuters reports — Congolese troops fought back on Thursday against rebels who rejected calls from African leaders to quit the eastern city of Goma, captured earlier this week in a major upset that forced U.N. troops to withdraw.

    Thousands of people fled the area of clashes around the town of Sake, as M23 rebel fighters rushed from Goma to reinforce their positions against an army counter-offensive.

    Both sides claimed control of Sake as night fell on the troubled eastern area. There was no independent verification of who was holding the town.

    The M23 rebel movement, widely believed to be backed by Rwanda, has vowed to "liberate" all of the vast, resource-rich country after taking Goma, a provincial capital on the Rwandan border, ramping up tensions in a fragile region. Full story…

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Women run after Congolese soldiers and rebel fighters battle over the eastern Congolese town of Sake, Nov. 22. The woman in orange, identified as Mamou, said she lost her husband by a fatal wound to the head from incoming mortar rounds. Thousands fled the M23 controlled town as the militants seeking to overthrow the government vowed to push forward despite mounting international pressure.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Thousands of Congolese flee the town of Sake, about 16 miles west of Goma, following fresh fighting in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nov. 22.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Congolese children sit on a step in front of M23 rebels in Sake, Nov. 22, 2012. Rebels took the town yesterday, but were engaged in heavy gunfighting this afternoon as government-allied militia tried to retake it.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    A woman who fled her home in Sake emerges from a shelter at an internally displaced person camp in Mugunga, between Goma and Sake, in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, Nov. 22.

    Related Articles:

    • Congo suspends army chief after U.N. arms sale report
    • Congo M23 rebel leader in Uganda for talks: source
    • Congo demands sanctions on Rwanda, Uganda over rebels

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    7 comments

    I guess if I were a gorilla I would kill all humans so that I and my fellow relatives could live in peace!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: africa, congo, conflict, sake, goma, m23
  • 21
    Nov
    2012
    5:47am, EST

    Rebels pledge to 'liberate' Congo after seizing city

    James Akena / Reuters

    A United Nations peacekeepers' armored vehicle drives past rebels patrolling a street in Goma in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo after they captured the city from the government army on Tuesday.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    GOMA, Democratic Republic of Congo -- Rebel forces in eastern Congo said Wednesday they planned to take control of the entire country after capturing the city of Goma as United Nations peacekeepers looked on.

    A spokesman for the M23 rebels -- a group widely believed to be backed by Rwanda -- said they planned to "liberate" the country by marching on the capital, Kinshasa, nearly 1,000 miles away.


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    The rebels had previously said they were seeking talks with Democratic Republic of Congo's President Joseph Kabila.

    "The journey to liberate Congo has started now ... We're going to move on to Bukavu and then to Kinshasa. Are you ready to join us?" Vianney Kazarama, spokesman for the M23 rebels, told a crowd of more than 1,000 in a stadium in Goma.

    PhotoBlog: Congo police surrender as rebels take control of Goma

    Goma fell Tuesday when hundreds of rebel fighters poured into the city and government troops melted away after sporadic gunfire.

    Rebels used local radio and television stations to appeal for calm, but there are fears of human rights abuses and tens of thousands of people had already fled days of fighting between the rebels and U.N.-backed Congolese soldiers.

    Rebel soldiers attack Goma in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The rebels are allegedly backed by Rwanda and threaten troops backed by United Nations peacekeepers. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Rebel army seizes control of Congo city as UN peacekeepers do nothing

    The M23 rebellion has aggravated tensions between Congo and its neighbor Rwanda, which Kinshasa's government says is orchestrating the insurgency as a means of grabbing the region's mineral wealth, which includes diamonds, gold and coltan, a metal used in mobile phones.

    While conflict has simmered almost constantly in Congo's east in recent years, this is the first time Goma has fallen to rebels since foreign occupying armies officially pulled out under peace deals at the end of the most recent 1998-2003 war, dubbed "Africa's World War" because so many countries became involved. 

    Aid agencies have estimated that 5 million people have died from fighting and conflict-related disease since the 1998 war began.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Twelve-year-old amputee Kakule Elie, who was hit by a stray bullet, lies in a bed in a hospital in Goma Tuesday.

    Congo rebel clashes stoke fears of broader conflict

    Diplomats at the United Nations and regional mediators in Central Africa have been seeking to prevent an escalation of hostilities in Congo, which is the size of Western Europe.

    Kabila and Rwandan Paul Kagame were due to meet later on Wednesday after holding three-way talks with Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni late on Tuesday, sources in the Ugandan presidency said.

    Rights group blasts Rwanda winning seat on UN Security Council

    In New York, the U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution late on Tuesday condemning the seizure of Goma and demanding that M23’s forces should withdraw and disband.

    The council also expressed "deep concern at reports indicating that external support continues to be provided to the M23.”

    Hague war crimes court to finds Congo warlord guilty

    The French government expressed frustration with U.N. peacekeepers, who gave up the battle for the city of a million people after Congo's army retreated, saying it was "absurd" that the U.N. force did not protect the city.

    "MONUSCO [the U.N. force] is 17,000 soldiers, but sadly it was not in a position to prevent what happened," French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said of the U.N.'s Congo mission. "It is necessary that the MONUSCO mandate is reviewed."

    Congo crisis exacerbated by heavy rains

    But a senior U.N. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the withdrawal of civilian and military Congolese officials had left a void it could not fill alone.

    "We're not the army of any country, let alone the Congolese army, and it's not for us to take positions by ourselves to stop a rebel attack or the movement of rebels," the official said. "Our job is to protect civilians.”

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    17 comments

    I liberated my Goma last night.

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    Explore related topics: africa, congo, rebels, rwanda, featured, goma, democratic-republic, m23
  • 20
    Nov
    2012
    11:34am, EST

    Rebel army seizes control of Congo city as UN peacekeepers do nothing

    Rebel soldiers attack Goma in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The rebels are allegedly backed by Rwanda and threaten troops backed by United Nations peacekeepers. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Reuters

    GOMA -- Rebels widely believed to be backed by Rwanda claimed control of Goma in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo Tuesday, parading through this frontier city of a million people past United Nations peacekeepers who did nothing to stop them.

    Hundreds of fighters from the M23 group entered Goma after days of clashes with U.N.-backed Congolese soldiers that forced tens of thousands of residents to flee.


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    A senior U.N. source told Reuters that international peacekeepers had given up defending the city after the Congolese troops left.

    "There is no army left in the town, not a soul... Once they were in the town what could we do? It could have been very serious for the population," he said, asking not to be named.

    The rebellion has aggravated tensions between Congo and its neighbor Rwanda, which Kinshasa's government says is orchestrating the insurgency as a means of grabbing the chaotic region's mineral wealth.

    Rwanda denies the assertion.

    However, Congolese Information Minister Lambert Mende ruled out talks with the rebels, suggesting they were proxies of the Rwandan government.


    "We will continue (resisting) until Rwanda has been pushed out of our country ... There will be absolutely no negotiations with M23," Mende said, adding that Kinshasa would talk only directly with Rwanda.

    Rights group blasts Rwanda winning seat on UN Security Council

    U.N. experts say Rwanda, a small but militarily capable neighbor that has intervened in Congo repeatedly over the past 18 years, is behind the M23 revolt.

    Congo's mineral wealth, including diamonds, gold, copper and coltan, a metal used in mobile phones, has inflamed the conflict and little has been spent on developing a country the size of western Europe.

    Goma's capture will also be an embarrassment for President Joseph Kabila, who won re-election late last year in polls that provoked widespread riots in Kinshasa and that international observers said were marred by fraud.

    Oct. 14, 2010: Margot Wallstrom, the UN Representative investigating sexual crimes in the Democratic Republic of Congo, was brought to tears by the stories she heard from women who had been ITN's Lindsey Hilsum reports.

    Hague war crimes court to finds Congo warlord guilty

    Congolese state television reported on Tuesday that Kabila, who has made few public comments on the rebellion in recent weeks, is travelling to Uganda, the mediator in the conflict with the eastern rebels.

    In the capital Kinshasa, security forces used tear gas and fired shots in the air to disperse a few hundred youths protesting the fall of Goma in a central square. Residents in Congo's second city, Kisangani, attacked Kabila's local party headquarters in frustration.

    Hundreds of M23 fighters accompanied their leader Sultani Makenga into Goma, where they were greeted by cheering crowds shouting "welcome" and "thank you."

    "We've taken the town, it's under control," said Colonel Vianney Kazarama, a spokesman for the rebels. "We're very tired, we're going to greet our friends now."

    Congo crisis exacerbated by heavy rains

    On Monday, Kazarama had denied the rebels would take the city.

    The U.N. has about 6,700 peacekeeping troops in North Kivu, including some 1,400 troops in and around Goma, and the mission had previously promised to defend the town.

    On Tuesday afternoon, armored U.N. vehicles continued to circulate in the town offering help to residents, but troops did not try to block the rebels. No government troops were to be seen.

    Before the rebels seized the city, streams of residents headed for the nearby border with Rwanda. More than 50,000 people who fled fighting earlier this year have abandoned refugee camps around Goma.

    "With the war, we're suffering so much, I've never seen anything like this in my life," a woman who gave her name only as Aisha told Reuters, clutching her three children. 

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    14 comments

    ..."Peacekeeping forces" only work when both sides are tired of fighting. U.N. Peacekeeping forces have a hideous reputation in much of the world.

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    Explore related topics: africa, congo, rebels, united-nations, rwanda, peacekeepers, featured, goma
  • 3
    Aug
    2012
    2:30pm, EDT

    Cholera threatens displaced Congolese

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Congolese gather on the roadside at an impromptu site for the displaced in Kanyarucinya on the outskirts of Goma back dropped by the Nyiragongo volcano in the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo on Aug. 3, 2012. Clashes between local militia and government forces in northern Democratic Republic of Congo have sent 2,000 people fleeing into neighboring Uganda, various sources said Friday.

    Jerome Delay / AP reports -- The first case of cholera has emerged among thousands of people in an impromptu refugee camp in eastern Congo. Civilians fled fighting between a new rebel group and government forces backed by U.N. peacekeepers. Doctors Without Borders reported Congo's army only controls the city of Goma and the village of Kibumba, six miles outside Goma. Now the rebels hold all towns as far north as Rutshuru and are threatening to besiege Goma. The U.N. Security Council on Thursday demanded that the M23 rebel group halt any advances toward Goma.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Internally displaced Congolese sit in a school on the outskirts of Goma, eastern Congo on Aug. 3.

    Jerome Delay / AP

    Congolese government troops load onto a truck outside the U.N.'s main base in Goma, eastern Congo, on Aug. 3.

    Related Articles:

    • U.N. demands end of foreign support for Congo rebels
    • Thousands flee heavy fighting between Congo army, rebels

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    1 comment

    Lord Jesus- I pray that you will provide for the safety of your desperate children in the Congo. Please protect them and provide for each persons needs. Please heal the sick and stop the cholera epidemic. Please stop the warfare and draw the world's attention to the plight of so many of your childr …

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    Explore related topics: refugees, congo, refugee, world-news, cholera, goma
  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    7:08am, EDT

    Congo rebel clashes stoke fears of broader conflict

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    A soldier of the M23 rebel group stands atop a hill overlooking Bunagana in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo on July 23, 2012. Several top commanders in the rebel movement were in Bunagana on Monday for a meeting, whilst a relative calm prevailed in the rebel-held territory.

    Phil Moore / AFP - Getty Images

    Colonel Sultani Makenga (seated inside vehicle), the commander of the M23 rebel group, drives through the town of Bunagana on July 23, 2012.

    The U.S. State Department announced on Sunday that it was cutting military aid to Rwanda following accusations that it had given backing to rebel groups in neighboring eastern Congo, Agence France Presse reported. 

    More than 200,000 civilians have had to leave their homes and several hundred fighters have been killed in recent clashes between the M23 rebel group and the Congolese government, Reuters reports. Reports of support for rebel fighters from Rwanda have stoked fears of a slide into a broader central African conflict, although countries in the region last week agreed a plan to eradicate armed groups in eastern Congo. 

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • UN condemns Congo attacks as rebel advance threatens Goma
    • Rebels in Congo seize towns from government forces

    Alissa Everett / Reuters

    A displaced woman, who fled fighting near Walikale, holds her child at Magunga III camp, outside the city of Goma, on July 23, 2012.

    James Akena / Reuters

    A UN peacekeeping patrol drives through Goma on July 23, 2012.

    James Akena / Reuters

    Families fleeing fighting between the Congolese army and M23 rebels walk toward Goma on July 23, 2012.

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    1 comment

    You will hear rumors of war and reports of wars.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: africa, congo, conflict, world-news, goma, m23

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