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Death in the Congo: a mother watches as machete militiamen murder her little girls
The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 05/30/2003 | Adrian Blomfield

Posted on 05/31/2003 8:16:24 PM PDT by FreedomCalls

From her hiding place in the woods outside the Congolese town of Bunia, Ruta Bonabingi watched as militiamen roasted and then ate the severed arms of her dying daughters. It was the horrifying finale to 48 hours of terror for Ruta and her family.

Three weeks after ethnic violence engulfed Bunia and the surrounding Ituri province, crazed gunmen stormed Shar, five miles outside the town. Shooting or hacking to death anyone they came across, they torched every home in the village.

Ruta managed to escape with most of her family, although two of her brothers were killed before they reached safety in the nearby forest.

After pressing deeper into the woods for two days without food and water, she thought she had finally reached safety when out of nowhere the militiamen, from the Lendu tribe, struck again.

With bullets flying everywhere in the hail of gunfire that ensued Ruta became separated from two of her daughters, Mateso, aged 12, and Michelle, who had just turned two.

After securing the rest of her family in another hiding place, Ruta crept back to the clearing to try to rescue the girls.

"There were many people wounded from bullets lying on the ground," she said.

"The Lendu were going about with machetes, chopping off one arm from the shoulder and then the other. Some people were screaming but most were silent. Then I saw them. Their arms had already been cut off."

The militiamen calmly cooked the flesh over an open fire before throwing their victims, some of whom were still alive, into the flames. "They were both moving, although very weakly," Ruta said. It is accounts like this that have galvanised the horrified world into action.

The United Nations Security Council meets today to finalise plans for a rapid reaction force, led by France, which could be in Bunia by as early as next week. Tony Blair has hinted that Britain could send several hundred soldiers to the region later.

The latest violence in one of the Democratic Republic of Congo's bloodiest provinces erupted in the first week of May as Uganda withdrew its troops in compliance with a peace plan to end the five-year war.

Despite the presence of the 700 UN peacekeepers already in Bunia to monitor the withdrawal, rival Hema and Lendu tribesmen fought viciously for supremacy in the town.

The peacekeepers had repeatedly warned the UN that a bloodbath was likely and requested reinforcements.

They were ignored. Lacking the firepower, equipment or mandate to intervene, they retreated powerless to their compound and watched.

No one knows how many have died. The Red Cross has found 415 bodies on the streets or in mass graves, and may just be the tip of the iceberg. There are fears that thousands more were killed in outlying villages. At least 50,000 people have been victims of violence in Ituri since 1998.

The Congo conflict has claimed between 3.1 and 4.7 million lives, mainly from war-related hunger and disease, since it began, making it the world's deadliest war since 1945.

Bunia itself was relatively calm yesterday although an occasional explosion, possibly caused by landmines, rocked the outskirts of the town. Few dared to venture out on to the streets, however. The town is virtually empty after Lendus, who made up the majority of the population, fled into the hills following the Hema capture of the town last week.

Along the town's main street shop doors hung drunkenly from their hinges. Windows on many buildings were smashed, their contents looted. The few establishments that escaped pillaging were firmly shuttered. A Hema boy, aged no more than eight or nine, sauntered down the street dressed in a ridiculously oversized military uniform, his camouflage jacket flapping about his calves.

He disappeared into a building for a moment and re-emerged casually swinging an AK47 from his hip.

A pick-up truck filled with grim-faced Hema soldiers and mounted with a fearsomely large machinegun roared down the street.

At the top of the road, two armoured personnel carriers manned by Uruguayan soldiers guarded the UN compound, barely visible behind 8ft-high protective barriers of razor wire.

Hundreds of Bunia's terrified residents, both Hema and to a lesser extent Lendu, remain in the compound where they fled when the fighting erupted.

Alarmingly, the town's radio station, now in Hema hands, gave warning this week that anyone who did not leave the camp immediately would be treated as "an enemy of state", according to UN officials.

The move has chilling echoes of hate radio during Rwanda's 1994 genocide when broadcasts urged Hutus to fill up the half-empty graves.

Many appear to have heeded the call, but Basara Mateso prefers to take his chances with the UN. He fled to the compound when the Lendu attacked his predominantly Hema suburb two weeks ago.

As he fled, he became separated from two of his seven children. When he ventured back a few hours later he found the bodies of both his teenage daughters, hacked to death with machetes.

"Ngathi was cut across the chest," he said. "Mami's head was missing. Both of them were without their hearts and their livers. Their bellies had been cut open."

Missionaries, Catholic priests and foreign aid workers have all confirmed that some Lendu militiamen have been eating their victims' hearts and livers, apparently in the superstitious belief that it would make them invincible.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: africa; congo; terrorism
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To: Copernicus
The Rape of Nanking. Japanese vs. Chinese
Also, the Pacific Theatre:Guadcanal, Iwo Jima. Americans vs. Japanese.

In none of those did soldiers from either side chop off the limbs of little girls, eat them with enthusiasm, and toss the still alive torsos onto the campfires all in front of the little girl's mother. This is not in the western experience.

Lendu militiamen have been eating their victims' hearts and livers, apparently in the superstitious belief that it would make them invincible.

Christianity has saved us in the west from this sort of thing. Perhaps we need to send more missionaries and less U.N. weenies.

"War is Hell." ~ W. T. Sherman
But this is not war's brutality of soldier on soldier. This is pure depravity, pure evil, a total lack of moral values. I can find no human characteristics in this story -- it reads likes something from a Jane Goodall special on Animal Planet.

61 posted on 06/01/2003 11:02:26 AM PDT by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: FreedomCalls
Duly noted.

Best regards,

62 posted on 06/01/2003 1:01:35 PM PDT by Copernicus (A Constitutional Republic revolves around Sovereign Citizens, not citizens around government.)
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To: FreedomCalls
Well, the Japanese actually did some things that were pretty similar, especially in China and Singapore. Putting babies in boiling pots, mass rapes, bayonettings, etc.
63 posted on 06/01/2003 2:32:16 PM PDT by Skywalk
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To: jocon307
Agreed. And I didn't mean to bite your head off. It just makes me ill when I hear horric tales such as this one.....knowing how much we've all spent on trying to help these folks.

I tend to be of the mind that helping others out is not just a gracious act (which it is) but is a necessary part of making the world a better place for everyone. But I also believe that you can only do so much. At some point you expect those that have been benefiting from that help to get with the program and start helping themselves.

64 posted on 06/01/2003 4:36:04 PM PDT by softengine
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To: softengine
"But I also believe that you can only do so much."


Soft, I agree with this too. It's very disturbing that 50 (or so) years after the end of Colonial rule Africa seems ever more to deserve the name "dark continent". Even Red China seems to try and do better by their populace than the so-called rulers in Africa.

It's very sad. Maybe, eventually, the growth of Black conservatism in America will help these unfortunate people.
65 posted on 06/01/2003 5:32:52 PM PDT by jocon307 (i just post without looking now!)
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