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ICRC urges all sides in
Congo to spare civilians
By Stephanie Nebehay
December 6, 2007 - (Reuters) The International
Committee of the Red Cross on Thursday called on the army and rebels
in the Democratic Republic of Congo to spare civilian lives in their
latest bout of fighting in the country's conflict-ravaged east.
The neutral humanitarian agency voiced special
concern at the fate of women in North Kivu province, who it said
were especially vulnerable to rape in the midst of "mass exodus"
linked to the flare-up in violence.
"The security of civilians trapped by the
fighting is currently our main priority," said Max Hadorn,
head of the ICRC's delegation in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The Swiss-based ICRC last week said all sides of
the conflict in the former Zaire were killing and raping civilians
and looting on a scale not seen in years.
In a statement issued on Thursday, it reminded
the warring parties of "their obligation under humanitarian
law to spare the lives and physical integrity of civilians, the
wounded and persons captured in connection with the fighting."
Government forces used attack helicopters, rockets
and artillery to retake the strategic town of Mushake -- about 40
km (25 miles) west of the provincial capital Goma -- on Wednesday,
in a rare victory over rebels loyal to renegade Tutsi General Laurent
Nkunda.
The fighting came as U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice and regional leaders reaffirmed their commitment to peace in
the area where various levels of violence have continued since a
1998-2003 war.
The build-up of military forces and repeated clashes
in North Kivu over the past year have led to the worst internal
displacement in the area since the civil war ended in 2003, according
to the UNHCR.
More than 400,000 people have fled violence in
North Kivu between government soldiers, Nkunda's insurgents, Rwandan
Hutu rebels, and local Mai Mai militia over the past year.
The ICRC noted a "mass exodus" of civilians
seeking refuge in safer areas since Mushake's takeover. Some were
trying to reach camps for displaced persons near Goma while others
were heading for the southern part of Lubero territory.
But the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said it had not
registered any new arrivals at five camps for internally displaced
persons (IDPs) around Goma since the arrival on Monday of 300 Congolese
who fled fighting in the Sake area.
"We know fighting is going on which means
people are probably on the road, on foot. Men frequently hide in
the woods to avoid recruitment or any retaliation," said Andrej
Mahecic, spokesman of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
Both sides in the conflict are obliged to spare
food, livestock and drinking water facilities which are essential
to the survival of the civilian population, according to the ICRC
which monitors compliance with the Geneva Conventions.
Medical facilities, ambulances and personnel must
also be protected at all times, the humanitarian agency said, further
stressing that children should not be recruited into army forces
or allowed to take part in the fighting.
From:http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L06520425.htm
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