Originally published Tuesday, January 6, 2009 at 6:25 AM
Report: Uganda rebels kill 8 in Congo park attack
Ugandan rebels waging one of Africa's longest and most brutal wars killed two wildlife rangers and six other people in a remote national park in northeastern Congo, a conservation group said Tuesday.
Associated Press Writer
Ugandan rebels waging one of Africa's longest and most brutal wars killed two wildlife rangers and six other people in a remote national park in northeastern Congo, a conservation group said Tuesday.
Lord's Resistance Army rebels carried out the attack on the Garamba National Park headquarters at Nagero on Jan. 2, WildlifeDirect said in a statement.
The dead also included two wives of park wardens, and 13 were hurt, most by bullets, the group said.
Last week, Congo's government said a joint offensive launched last month with the armies of Uganda and Sudan had routed Ugandan rebels from the park and forced them to flee the area toward neighboring Central African Republic.
The Lord's Resistance Army has fought for two decades and aid and rights groups have accused them of cutting off the lips of civilians and forcing thousands of children to serve as soldiers or sex slaves. The conflict has spilled into Sudan and Congo, which suffered back-to-back civil wars from 1996 to 2002 that drew neighboring countries into what became a rush to plunder Congo's massive mineral wealth.
Since Dec. 25 in northeastern Congo, the Ugandan rebels have killed more than 400 people in a series of massacres, according to Catholic charity group Caritas, which cited its staff in the region. Caritas said its employees identified the rebels by their dreadlocked hair and Acholi language.
"The headquarters in Nagero are in a state of havoc," WildlifeDirect cited chief warden Bernard Iyomi as saying.
The group said Iyomi "directed the resistance during the attack and ... narrowly escaped death."
Rebels destroyed several park buildings, communications equipment, fuel and food.
The remote Garamba park is home to elephants, giraffes, buffaloes and hippos.
Long-running peace talks between the Lord's Resistance Army and Uganda's government have stalled. Rebel leaders have sought guarantees they will not be arrested under international warrants. The rebels' elusive leader, Joseph Kony, and other top members are wanted by the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company
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