Please check out Michael Kavanagh’s “Five Million Dead and Counting” at Slate, a reporter’s account of the ongoing civil war and atrocities in North Kivu, an eastern province of the Congo:
There are now more than 1 million displaced people scattered throughout the province. In the last 10 years of fighting, more than 5 million people have died in the Congolese conflict — mostly civilians who haven’t had access to enough food or health care because of the fighting. And let’s be clear: That’s 5 million and counting.
Essentially, the civil war in the Congo is an extension of the civil war and genocide in Rwanda, with — if I may simplify — Congolese Tutsi rebels, led by Laurent Nkunda and backed by Rwanda’s Tutsi-led government, in battle against the Congolese government and Rwandan Hutus in the Congo: “And the early returns look like displacement, starvation, rape, murder, and terror.” (According to the International Rescue Committee, “[c]onflict and humanitarian crisis in [the Congo] have taken the lives of 5.4 million people since 1988 and continue to leave as many as 45,000 dead every month.”)
There is a good deal of blame to go around, with brutality on both sides, but Kavanagh rightly points to the failure of the international community — the U.N., the E.U., the U.S., and the A.U. — to respond in any meaningful way to the crisis.
Make sure to read the whole thing. We all need to pay more attention to Africa — and to what’s going on in the Congo (it’s not just Darfur that’s suffering). And not just when Bono or Bob Geldof or John le Carré tells us to.
















