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Surviving Critical Times Hard To Deal With

Friday, January 06, 2006

WHO CARES ABOUT THE CONGO?


RESOURCE WARS
The British medical journal Lancet says that 38,000 people, mostly children are dying every month. Every month! That figure is a shocking indictment of man's inability to govern himself or others. And who are the foreign armies that are assisting in the genocide of Congo's children for profits?





BBC says "Thousands' dying in DR Congo war "

Congolese hope elections due this year will end their miseryConflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo is killing 38,000 people each month, says the Lancet medical journal. Most of the deaths are not caused by violence but by malnutrition and preventable diseases after the collapse of health services, the study said. Since the war began in 1998, some 4m people have died, making it the world's most deadly war since 1945, it said. A peace deal has ended most of the fighting but armed gangs continue to roam the east, killing and looting. "Congo is the deadliest crisis anywhere in the world over the past 60 years," said Richard Brennan, health director of the New York-based International Rescue Committee and the study's lead author.

QUICK GUIDE
The war in DR Congo
"Ignorance about its scale and impact is almost universal and international engagement remains completely out of proportion to humanitarian need," Some 17,000 United Nations peacekeepers are in DR Congo, to restore peace and organise elections due by the end of June 2006.

Looting

Researchers visited nearly 20,000 households across the country over a three-month period in 2004, recording births and deaths over the previous 18 month. They then compared their results with data from neighbouring countries and before the war began and are confident that their results are accurate. Children were worst affected by the increased mortality rate, often from easily preventable and treatable diseases like malaria and diarrhoea, the study found. In some parts, death rates were double the pre-war level, while the mortality rate in the city of Kisangani dropped by 80% after fighting there stopped in 2002. At its height, at least seven foreign armies were involved in the war. Many fighters - both foreign and Congolese - have been accused of looting DR Congo's vast natural mineral resources during the war. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4586832.stm

DR CONGO CRISIS

Other BBC Links

TROUBLE IN THE EAST
'Cursed' gold On the trail from militia-controlled gold mines to Uganda
Disarmament battle
Living with Rwanda's Hutu rebels
EASTERN TOUR
Ravaged region
Impossible mission
Battle hardened rebels
Che Guevara's footsteps
FEATURES
In pictures: Surviving rape
Forgotten war
Rape victims seek solace
Meeting the president
BACKGROUND
Q&A: DR Congo conflict
Country profile
RELATED BBC LINKS:
Network Africa
RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
UN Mission in DR Congo
The Lancet
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