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U.N. Reports Killing Spree in Congo

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From Associated Press

At least 966 people were killed in attacks on more than a dozen villages in northeastern Congo last week, U.N. officials said Sunday after a preliminary investigation.

It is not clear who carried out the attacks, which occurred in Ituri province, the scene of some of the most vicious battles in Congo’s 4 1/2-year-old civil war. Rival tribes, rebel factions and Ugandan troops all have been involved in the fighting in the mineral-rich province.

Witnesses told the U.N. investigators that the attackers included women and children while others were men in military uniforms, said Manodje Mounoubai, a spokesman for the U.N. mission in Congo.

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“This is the worst single atrocity since the start of the civil war,” Mounoubai said by telephone from Kinshasa, Congo’s capital.

The killing spree occurred over a period of just a few hours Thursday in the Roman Catholic parish of Drodro and 14 surrounding villages in Ituri.

“The attack started with a whistle blow and lasted between five and eight hours,” Mounoubai said.

U.N. military observers visited the area Saturday and spoke to witnesses, survivors and local leaders who led them to 20 mass graves, Mounoubai said. He said many of the victims appeared to have been summarily killed.

Another spokesman for the U.N. mission, Hamadoun Toure, said the mass graves had “fresh blood on them.” Investigators said some of the survivors were seriously wounded, mostly by machetes but also by bullets.

On Saturday, a Congolese rebel leader, Thomas Lubanga, accused Ugandan troops and allied Congolese tribal fighters of carrying out the slaughter.

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Lubanga, head of the rebel Union of Congolese Patriots, said Ugandan troops and Lendu tribal fighters used mortars, small arms and machetes to attack three towns in Ituri, killing 942 people.

Ugandan military spokesman Capt. Felix Kulayigye denied that any Ugandan troops were involved in the massacre. Kulayigye, who is based in Ituri, said Saturday that about 400 people were killed in tribal fighting.

An aid worker and a tribal leader in the provincial capital of Bunia, however, said Ugandan forces were in the area when civilians were killed. They could not say whether the troops took part. Bunia is about 50 miles from the Ugandan border.

Witnesses told the investigators that some of the assailants were speaking Kilendu, the Lendus’ tribal language, while others spoke Kiswahili, the lingua franca in eastern Congo, Mounoubai said. Most Ugandan soldiers also speak Kiswahili.

Congo’s war broke out in August 1998 when Rwanda and Uganda sent troops to back rebels seeking to oust then-President Laurent Kabila. Zimbabwe, Angola and Namibia sent troops to back Kabila, splitting the country into rebel- and government-held areas.

Most foreign troops withdrew after a series of peace deals took hold, but fighting among rival rebel factions, tribal fighters and Ugandan troops has continued.

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