Promote Peace in D.R. Congo
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Congo: The Bleeding Heart of Africa |
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Overview
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Monday, 30 January 2006 |
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The conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) remains the deadliest
since World War II and has resulted in the loss of over 4 million lives since
1998 and the displacement of millions more. As many as 1,000 people a day
continue to die from war-related causes -- mainly disease and malnutrition, but
also continuing violence, primarily in the eastern region.
The war began when Uganda
and Rwanda
invaded to overthrow DRC's President Mobutu Sese Seko in 1997, a bid that was
successful. But they invaded again in 1998 to overthrow Mobutu's successor, Laurent Kabila. In response, three
other countries--Zimbabwe, Angola, and Namibia--intervened
to defend Kabila and fought against Rwanda
and Uganda.
The withdrawal of these countries from the Congolese
territory in late 2002 left behind a DRC in shambles.
Though peace agreements have been forged and the country has moved to an
elected democratic government, peace has yet to come to DRC. Violence continues to wreak the mineral-rich
region of eastern Congo,
where Uganda and Rwanda
are still suspected of supporting local
militias. Minerals mined in the region end up on engagement rings and in
computers in America,
and proceeds from their sales drive a local war economy.
The D.R Congo is the third largest country in Africa after Sudan and Algeria and the twelfth largest nation in the world . Its
geographic location in the heart of Africa and
its wealth make it a strategically, politically, and economically important
country. However, this is of little
significance if its neighbors are politically unstable. Congo moved from occupation by
foreign national armies to destabilization by foreign and domestic rebel groups,
preventing it from progressing after the democratic presidential election of
Joseph Kabila on October 29th, 2006. Today, Kabila is stuck trying
to address the issue of foreign rebel groups in the Congolese territory. Such groups
include: the National Congress for the Defense of Democracy/Front for the
Defense of Democracy (FDD), a Burundian rebel group; Combatant Forces Abacunguzi (CFOA), an armed
branch of the Democratic Forces for the
Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR); National Liberation Forces/Party for the
Liberation of Hutu People (NLF-PALIHUTUPE) from Burundi; the Lord Resistance
Army (LRA), a rebel group from northern Uganda; and Nkundabatware’s army, a Tutsi
pro-Rwanda Congolese rebel group.
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Congo: The Bleeding Heart of Africa
Send Faxes to Your Representatives for Peace in Congo and Rwanda!
D.R. Congo Brief History Profile
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