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ATTACK ON REFUGEE CAMP IN BURUNDI
KILLS AT LEAST 180
August 14, 2004 - (Associated Press) Dozens of
attackers raided a United Nations refugee camp in western Burundi,
shooting and hacking to death at least 180 people, witnesses and
officials said Saturday.
A Burundian Hutu rebel faction, the National Liberation
Forces, claimed responsibility for the attack late Friday near the
border with Congo, saying that its fighters were pursuing Burundian
soldiers who fled to the camp from a nearby military position. The
camp sheltered ethnic Tutsi refugees from Congo known as the Banyamulenge,
who had fled the fighting in Congo's troubled border province of
South Kivu.
The attackers screamed war cries as they rushed
into the camp and set it on fire, said Louis Niyonzima, a local
official.
"What we have seen so far are many, many, many
bodies of children, women and men," said Eliana Nabaa, spokeswoman
for the United Nations mission in Congo. "People were sleeping
when the attack happened. People were killed as they tried to escape."
"The scene is absolutely horrific," Ms.
Nabaa said by telephone from Bukavu, the capital of South Kivu.
"There are many people burnt." She described the attackers
as well armed and organized.
Isabelle Abric, spokeswoman for the United Nations
mission in Burundi, said 159 people had been killed and 101 others
had been wounded in the attack on the camp in Gatumba, 12 miles
from the Congolese border. At least 30 of the wounded died later
in a hospital, she said.
The bloodshed came after gunmen attacked a Burundian
Army position about a half-mile away.
"These guys were armed with grenades, machetes
and automatic weapons," said Fernando del Mundo, a spokesman
for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Geneva.
"While the attack was going on they were beating drums."
Pasteur Habimana, spokesman for the National Liberation
Forces, justified the assault on the camp by saying Burundian soldiers
were hiding there after the attack on the post.
"We were also attacked by armed Banyamulenge
militiamen who lived in this camp," he said. "The camp
was a genuine Banyamulenge militiaman headquarters."
Earlier, Mr. Habimana had said the victims were
killed by Burundian soldiers who fled into the refugee camp to escape
the rebel assault. A spokesman for the Burundian Army could not
be reached for comment.
The National Liberation Forces is the last main
rebel movement fighting the government in Burundi's 10-year-old
civil war, which has killed 300,000 people. War broke out in 1993,
when Hutus took up arms after Tutsi paratroopers assassinated the
country's first democratically elected president, a Hutu. Burundi's
Tutsi minority has effectively run the country for all but a few
months since independence in 1962.
President Domitien Ndayizeye of Burundi visited
the camp on Saturday and described the massacre as "a shame"
and asked the Congolese government to assist in investigations.
"What I can say is that it is Burundi which has been attacked,"
he said. "The attackers killed innocent refugees who sought
refuge in Burundi.
The rebels, he said, "declared that they attacked
a military camp and that the soldiers fled in this camp, but I saw
no soldier's body except those of young children, women and old
persons."
The attack occurred one day after Vice President
Azarias Ruberwa of Congo visited the camp to encourage the refugees
to return home.
In Kinshasa, the capital of Congo, government officials
were meeting on Saturday to discuss the killings. They had no immediate
comment.
A renegade Congolese Army commander, whose troops
briefly seized Bukavu in June over complaints that Banyamulenge
kinsmen were singled out by Congolese authorities, said the attack
in Burundi proved his charges. But he stopped short of threatening
retaliation.
The commander, Brig. Gen. Laurent Nkunda, accused
the Congolese Army of letting attackers of the Burundi operate in
its zone unchallenged.
"This event proves me right," he said
by telephone. "This confirms that there's an extermination
plan against the Banyamulenge."
President Paul Kagame of Rwanda, speaking in Kigali,
the Rwandan capital, said the massacre "proves what we have
been saying over time, that there have been incidents that are ignored
by the international community and the U.N. where people are being
killed in eastern Congo, being targeted for who they are."
United Nations officials were studying whether the
attack was carried out with the help of Congolese tribal fighters
known as the Mayi-Mayi or with Rwandan rebels based in eastern Congo,
an official said.
The Rwandan insurgents include members of the former
army and the extremist Interahamwe militia that fled to Congo after
playing a major role in the genocide in Rwanda in 1994. More than
500,000 minority Tutsis and political moderates from the Hutu majority
were killed in the 100-day slaughter that was organized by the Hutu
government then in power.
The killings in Burundi will further complicate
United Nations efforts to encourage Congolese refugees to return
home, said M'Hand Ladjouzi, head of the United Nations mission in
North Kivu Province in Congo.
"This is a setback in our efforts to ensure
security here," Mr. Ladjouzi said. "We are trying to find
out who did this. Their aim is to complicate the situation. Obviously,
they did this to stop all the efforts the international community
is making."
From: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/15/international/africa/15burundi.html
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