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Eastern Congo: Looks like
heaven, feels like hell by Kate Thomas
The government official spun
around in his chair, kicked an empty beer bottle with his heel and stared
out of the window. "North Kivu looks like heaven," he said.
I agreed. A sunbird sang
and we sat for a moment in silence, lost in the sunset. In the distance,
cormorants and cuckoo hawks circled high above the glassy waters of Lake
Kivu.
As the sky blackened and
a plume of red smoke spurted from Nyiragongo volcano, the official took
a long drag on his cigarette. "It feels like hell, my girl," he said.
He could have been talking
about any one of a number of conflict zones: the white sands of Baghdad
Island, Herat in Afghanistan or Darfur's mountainous Jebel Marra region,
with its orchards, hot springs and long-drop waterfalls.
But this was Goma, once the
"tourist capital of Congo" and North Kivu's main town, perched on the northern
shores of Lake Kivu, where jungle meets volcanic rock and gentle green
hills.
The tourists don't come anymore.
Information centres are boarded up and the minister for tourism has turned
his attention to journalists. "The future of our province is dark,"
said local resident Kennedy Ndayisenga, who once ran a successful tour
company but now works as a fixer. "We don't know where we're going."
Goma used to be known for
its sunrises, mountain climbing and gorilla trekking . Now the city that
has endured endless loss, destruction and volcanic eruptions against a
perennial backdrop of conflict is in the grip of a forgotten emergency.
Since August, more than 175,000
people have fled violence in North Kivu between government troops, insurgents
loyal to renegade Tutsi General Laurent Nkunda, Rwandan Hutu rebels and
jungle Mai Mai militia.
Last week, the Congolese
army used helicopter gunships, artillery and rocket launchers to retake
the dairy farming town of Mushake - around 40 km (25 miles) from Goma -
from rebels loyal to Nkunda. At least 35 soldiers, from both sides, were
killed. At least 30 were injured.
Mushake was quiet when I
passed through two weeks ago. Houses were empty, restaurants and drinking
holes boarded up. Most of the residents had fled and only the wives and
families of Nkunda's soldiers remained. They stood around chatting in the
square. One woman led me through the muddy streets to her home. We walked
through a cloud of tiny baby-blue butterflies, past cattle grazing on the
rolling plains, dotted with skinny eucalyptus trees and orange blossom.
Now those streets are marked with blood, sweat and tears.
War zones aren't supposed
to be beautiful. And if they are, reporters probably aren't supposed to
admit it. But in Mushake, like the rest of North Kivu, it serves only to
heighten the desperate situation.
The United Nations says tens
of thousands of women and girls - some as young as a few months old - have
been raped in the provinces of North and South Kivu in the past year alone.
Deaths from hunger and preventable diseases are peaking. Villages empty
as camps for internally displaced people swell.
At Mugunga IDP camp, I knelt
in the black earth to conduct interviews with people who had lost everything.
When I looked up, the mountains were embroidered with the gold rays of
early morning sunlight.
In Goma, policemen carry
rocket launchers almost as tall as them. In the countryside, children transport
arms for rebels. Families shelter in schools and churches. Old men cry
out for biscuits.
Yes, North Kivu is bloody
beautiful. The mountains are bruised and the volcano is bleeding. Streams
of blood-red lava spill over its lip. The smoky flames look like a flare,
a cry for help.
This, as Joseph Conrad said,
is one of the dark places of the world.
With neither tourism nor
adequate news coverage, it will probably remain that way.
About the Author:
Visit Hakuna Matata tours
Website By clicking here , gorillas
tracking.
Kate Thomas is a foreign
news reporter for the Independent, paying special attention to humanitarian
and development stories. She has reported from West Africa, Europe and
Southeast Asia. Kate has previously worked in the NGO sector in Thailand,
Cambodia and the UK, and regularly contributes to travel supplements and
guidebooks on developing countries.
Keywords : Congo war,
Congo situation, about nkunda, hakunamatatatours,com, congo travel advice,
congo facts, gorilla trekking
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