Ugandan rebels kill 16 in 2 attacks: Congo
Updated on
Tuesday, January 06, 2009, 00:00
IST

Dakar (Senegal), Jan 06: Ugandan rebels waging one of Africa's longest and most brutal wars killed at least 16 people including two wildlife rangers in the latest reported attacks in Congo's northeast, conservation officials and the UN said on Tuesday.
In an attack yesterday, the rebels killed eight people in
the village of Napopo, burning houses and kidnapping several
others in the area near Congo's borders with Sudan and Uganda,
Ron Redmond, spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees said in Geneva.
Redmond had few details but said victims reported that
the so-called Lord's Resistance Army was behind the attack.
In a separate assault Friday in the same region, rebels
attacked the Garamba National Park headquarters at Nagero, the
conservation group WildlifeDirect said in a statement. Two
wildlife rangers were killed along with two wives of park
wardens, the group said.
Thirteen others were hurt, most by bullets, it said.
Last week, Congo's government said a joint offensive
launched in December 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.
Bureau Report