A Ugandan official says
hundreds of Congolese have fled to the East African nation in recent days to
escape deadly ethnic-based fighting.
Gerald Menya, commissioner for
refugees in Uganda, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that two to three
Congolese are arriving each hour. He said over 60,000 have sought shelter in
Uganda in the past year, fleeing clashes between the Hema and Lendu ethnic
groups in Congo's mineral-rich northeastern ituri province.
The United Nations reported
earlier this month that more than 700 people were killed and at least 168
injured in the fighting from December 2017 to September 2019, with the Hema
herding community mostly targeted by the Lendu farming community. The U.N. human
rights office said killings, rapes and other violence targeting the Hema may
amount to crimes against humanity.
Menya said the Congolese arrivals are
“bringing a lot of shock” to available resources in Uganda, a country that
already hosts 1.3 million refugees, many who fled the civil war in neighboring
South Sudan. The U.N. refugee agency noted funding gaps in September, saying it
was operating at only 35% of its total requirements.
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