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Six Workers for Red Cross Killed in Congo Ambush

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From Associated Press

Attackers with guns and machetes shot and slashed to death six Red Cross workers on a remote road in eastern Congo, leaving their bodies to be discovered in their burned vehicles, aid workers said Friday.

The ambush Thursday marked the deadliest single attack on the International Committee of the Red Cross in five years. The victims were a Swiss nurse, a Colombian relief worker and four Congolese. Some were shot, others were both shot and cut with machetes, said Boni Mbaka, a U.N. official who saw some of the bodies.

“It’s very horrible,” Mbaka said. “There were no survivors [so] it’s difficult to say what happened.”

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The Red Cross immediately suspended operations in eastern Congo, the region hardest hit by a 2 1/2-year war that has involved six nations.

International relief officials met late Friday in the Congolese border town of Goma to decide whether to cease operations entirely in the region, where more than a million people--mostly civilians--have died in fighting or from disease and hunger related to the conflict.

Congo’s war started in 1998 when Rwanda, Uganda and their rebel allies took up arms against President Laurent Kabila, accusing him of sheltering militias that threatened regional security. Zimbabwe, Angola and Namibia entered the war on Congo’s side.

The aid workers were attacked while taking medicine to a health center in rebel- and Ugandan-held northeastern Congo, traveling without armed escort in two Red Cross-marked vehicles.

Colleagues became worried when they lost radio contact with the team, and alerted authorities, said Antoine Atawamba, Red Cross spokesman in Kinshasa, the Congolese capital.

A Ugandan military patrol found the bodies and the vehicles about 40 miles north of the town of Bunia.

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The two vehicles were set on fire, Red Cross officials said. That they were left behind was unusual, distinguishing the attack from robberies by bandits or typical attacks by Congolese Mayi-Mayi warriors and Rwandan Hutu Interahamwe militiamen.

“We’re not blaming anyone, because we don’t know who to blame,” said Paul Castella, head of the Red Cross delegation in Kinshasa.

The Red Cross identified the foreign victims as Rita Fox, a 36-year-old Swiss nurse, and Julio Delgado, a 54-year-old Colombian relief worker.

The four slain Congolese were nurse Veronique Saro, 33; Unen Ufoirworth, 29, a staff member in charge of reuniting families separated by the fighting; and drivers Aduwe Boboli, 39, and Jean Molokabonge, 56.

In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan was “greatly distressed to learn of the brutal murders,” spokeswoman Marie Okabe said. Annan appealed to all Congo’s combatants to allow safe access to civilians in need, she said.

The killings took place in Ituri province, which is under the control of Uganda and a Ugandan-backed rebel group led by Jean-Pierre Bemba.

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Bemba called the killings an “inexcusable assassination” and said an inquiry by his movement was underway.

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