War in Congo Kills 45,000 People Each Month
· Decade-long conflict is most deadly since 1945· Half of dying are small children, survey shows
A decade of fighting in the Democratic Republic of Congo is continuing to kill about 45,000 people each month - half of them small children - in the deadliest conflict since the second world war, according to a new survey.
The International Rescue Committee said preventable diseases and starvation aggravated by conflict have claimed 5.4 million lives since the beginning of the second Congo war in 1998, equivalent to the population of Denmark. Although the war officially ended in 2002, malaria, diarrhoea, pneumonia and malnutrition continue to claim thousands of lives.
The study of 14,000 households across Congo between January 2006 and April 2007 found that nearly half of all the deaths were of children under the age of five, who make up only 19% of the population.
"The majority of deaths have been due to infectious diseases, malnutrition and neonatal- and pregnancy-related conditions. Increased rates of disease are likely related to the social and economic disturbances caused by conflict, including disruption of health services, poor food security, deterioration of infrastructure and population displacement. Children ... are particularly susceptible to these easily preventable and treatable conditions," the IRC survey says.
Congo has endured two foreign invasions and protracted civil war since the aftermath of Rwanda's genocide spilled across the border in 1994 with an influx of more than a million Rwandan Hutu refugees. The years of conflict resulted in millions of people fleeing their homes, sometimes to live for years in forests where many died, and the collapse of what infrastructure still remained after decades of neglect under Mobutu Sese Seko.
Those who returned home found water sources, health clinics and farms destroyed. Marauding bands of armed men were responsible for mass rape, particularly in the east of the country, which made it much more difficult for women to venture into fields to grow food.
"When war destroys a country's economy and infrastructure, there's no quick fix," said Dr Richard Brennan, one of the survey's authors. "Significant improvement in Congo's health and mortality will require years of unwavering commitment from the government and the international community and substantial financial investment. Sadly, the humanitarian crisis in Congo continues to be overlooked and funding remains disproportionate to the enormity of need."
The IRC said that a peace deal in the eastern province of North Kivu, where fighting has displaced hundreds of thousands of people in recent months, is also crucial to curbing the rising death toll.
There was hope yesterday that the conflict in the east might finally be drawing to a close after the government and armed groups were reported to be ready to sign a peace agreement. But the deal apparently did not directly address how to deal with two of the most important armed factions - that of the rebel Tutsi general, Laurent Nkunda, who is wanted for war crimes, and the Rwandan Hutu group that has been a leading cause of instability.
Congo is one of 11 countries where 20% of children die before the age of five, according to a Unicef report released yesterday. A child born in Sierra Leone has the lowest chance of surviving until the age of five. The report, the State of the World's Children, says nearly 9.7 million children under five died worldwide last year from disease or lack of food.
In Sierra Leone, which is still recovering from an 11-year civil war, the child mortality rate was 270 deaths per 1,000 births. The average rate in developed countries is six deaths per 1,000 births.
Twenty-eight of the 30 countries with the highest child mortality rates are in sub-Saharan Africa. But Unicef said there have also been successes on the continent. Mozambique has seen a 41% drop in child mortality since 1990.
© Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
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12 Comments so far
Show AllAt last there is an article on Congo in CD!!!! Even though the US and the Europe sponsored genocide has been going on in Congo with millions of innocent deaths, the media in the US is UNDERSTANDABLY silent about it, because the US and the Europe are the sponsors of this bloodshed. The cause for this bloodshed is again the same: natural resources in Congo. Congo has tremendous natural resources. There are thirty percent of the world's reserves of cobalt, ten percent of the world's reserve of copper, eighty percent of the world's reserve of coltan. In order to occupy, exploit and profit from these natural resources, the US and the Europe transnational companies need the genocide of Congolese to continue. These transnational corporations are profiting at enormous rates while the Congolese people are suffering tremendously. Some of the American companies (the names of these companies are mentioned in the UN 2001-2003 report on the illegal exploitation of the natural resources of the Congo) that are benfiting from this innocent bloodshed are: Cabot Corporation of Boston, Massachusetts, (the former CEO of Cabot Corporation Samuel Bodman, is current Secretary of Energy in the Bush administration), the OM Group of Cleveland, Ohio, Freeport-McMoRan of Phoenix, Arizona, who acquired mining rights from Phelps Dodge, who have been involved in copper exploitation in the Congo. The copper mines, the Tenke Fungurume mine that Freeport-McMoRan has, represents one of the richest deposits of copper in the world. However, the Congolese government and Congolese people are not benefiting from the contracts that were established and that provided Freeport-McMoRan with those resources.
There are a number of Canadian companies. It is said that almost every Canadian prime minister since Pierre Trudeau- Joe Clark, Brian Mulroney, Jean Chretien-has been involved in the mining company in the Congo.
The reports from the Congolese government state that eighty percent of the population live on thirty cents or less a day, whereas the US and the European transnational companies pocket billions of dollars.
The story in Congo, Iraq, Somalia, Central and South American countries is same: RAPING OF THE NATURAL RESOURCES AND KILLING OF THE INNOCENT PEOPLE IN THESE COUNTRIES BY THE US and THE WEST. THE BOTTOMLINE IS: BLOODMONEY; GREED THAT HAS NO EYES (TO SEE INNOCENT FACES, SUFFERING, DEATH), NO EARS (TO HEAR INNOCENT CRIES, PAIN AND AGONY), NO HEART AND SOUL (THAT IS WHY THE AMERICANS AND THE EUROPEANS COULD BUTCHER INNOCENT CHILDREN, WOMEN, AND MEN IN ORDER TO SATISFY THEIR GREED).
It is incomprehensible how Americans and Europeans are running their vehicles with OIL MIXED WITH INNOCENT BLOOD, and enjoy comforts by RAPING NATURAL RESOURCES AND BUTCHERING INNOCENT CHILDREN, WOMEN AND MEN OF OTHER COUNTRIES. In mythological stories, it is the DEVILS that take pleasure in EATING THE "FLESH" OF THE INNOCENT.
Read: "A Tale Of Two Genocides, Congo And Darfur"
By Glen Ford
18 July, 2007
www.blackagendareport.org
Mike Corbeil,
Thank you for the link to www.allthingspass.com.. very informative (and heartbreaking).
More people are dying in this conflict in any given 2 days than have died in the Palestinian/Israel conflict in the past 8 years. Yet, articles about the former outnumber articles about the latter by over 50-1 including on CD. Why is this? Is it because both the killers and the victims are black?
It shows the great endurance of the human race that there are any people left in Africa. Of course, the definition of human is quite difficult considering that the human race is not bothered much by this and is unlikely to do anything to stop this or any other genocide you might care to mention.
Another issue in this is the gvernment spends more money making the average movie then on aid for these people.
Unfortunatly though it might also be a good thing that America isnt "helping" for reasons seen in the middle east
KEM PATRICK
somehow, i think you are going to be spared the 'depression'. these poor people will still have to live with it for years to come. the 'allthingspass' website is very good.
When our depression hits, we'll fully understnd exactly what they are suffering.
So that's five 911 size disasters every day for 10 years
We are so full of … ourselves (that's bad enough)
Two good resources are the sub-saharan African and/or Africa indexes at www.globalresearch.ca and Keith Harmon Snow's website, www.allthingspass.com . KHS has written plenty of very thorough articles on the major problems in several African countries, which seem to be his main focus. He has, f.e., emphasised that the situation in the Congo and/or DRC is as bad as or strongly comparable to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Palestine; covering very bad situations in several African countries.
Those resources provide a lot more information on what evidently is or strongly seems to be really going on behind the front (msm, corp. news cover-up media) scenes of politics and "trade".
'War is a Racket' again applies.
African genocide--
500 years and it's still going strong.
It's inexcuseable and there's apparently nothing that can be done about it. Our collective karma is going to get us for letting this happen.
The loss of 3000 stockbrokers on 9-11 sort of pales in significance against statistics like these. What must Africans make of our insistence that heaven and earth should revolve around our piddling little disaster?
If these kids were white, it would be a different story.