KILIMANYOKA, Congo — Rebels vowing to take Congo’s eastern provincial capital advanced toward Goma on Tuesday, sending tens of thousands fleeing. The top U.N. envoy said government soldiers had fired on civilians and foreign aid workers trying to escape the region.
Alan Doss, the top U.N. envoy in Congo, said peacekeepers were forced to “respond” after government soldiers fired on civilians and trapped foreign aid workers trying to leave Rutshuru, a strategic town north of Goma. He vowed to keep Rutshuru and other towns out of rebel hands.
“We are going to remain there, and we are going to act against any effort to take over a city or major population center by force,” he told reporters in New York in a videoconference.
Aid agencies said their workers could hear bombs exploding as the rebels closed in and angry and frightened civilians and soldiers blocked their evacuation by U.N. peacekeepers.
The mob was looting humanitarian centers and the belongings of about 50 trapped aid workers in Rutshuru, said Ivo Brandau, a spokesman for the U.N. humanitarian agency OCHA.
Brandau said tens of thousands of civilians were fleeing that town, heading north and east toward the Ugandan border. Rutshuru had a population of about 30,000 residents and the same number of refugees.
Doctors Without Borders said its doctors and nurses trapped at Rutshuru Hospital had treated 70 war wounded since Sunday but that most patients had fled the hospital.
Meanwhile, a sudden influx of an estimated 30,000 people tripled the size of a camp in Kibati in a matter of hours, said Ron Redmond, spokesman for the U.N. refugee agency.
“It’s chaos up there,” Redmond told The Associated Press from Geneva, citing U.N. staff in Congo. “These crowds of people coming down from the north have already started turning up there.”
The unrest in eastern Congo has been fueled by festering hatreds left over from the Rwandan genocide and the country’s unrelenting civil wars. Renegade Gen. Laurent Nkunda has threatened to take Goma despite calls from the U.N. Security Council for him to respect a cease-fire brokered by the U.N. in January.
Nkunda charges that the Congolese government has not protected his minority Tutsi tribe from a Rwandan Hutu militia that escaped to Congo after helping perpetrate the 1994 Rwandan genocide in which at least a half million Tutsis were slaughtered.
Nkunda’s ambitions have expanded since he launched a fresh onslaught on Aug. 28 — he now declares he will “liberate” all of Congo, a country the size of Western Europe with vast reserves of diamonds, gold and other resources. Congo’s vast mineral wealth helped fuel back-to-back wars from 1997 to 2003.
The U.N. says more than 200,000 people have been forced from their homes in the past two months, joining 1.2 million displaced in previous conflicts in the east.



