By Olivia Le Poidevin, GENEVA
Switzerland
Some 7,000 people have died since January in fighting in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the prime minister of the DRC told a high-level meeting of the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Monday, with combatants and civilians among the dead.
About 3,000 deaths were
reported in Goma, Judith Suminwa said, and about 450,0000 people were left
without shelter after 90 displacement camps were destroyed.
Since January, the M23 rebel
group, which Kinshasa accuses Rwanda of backing, has captured swathes of
eastern Congo including the cities of Goma and Bukavu, and valuable mineral
deposits.
The latest fighting, and M23's
advance, are part of a major escalation in eastern Congo of a conflict
over power, identity and resources dating back to the Rwandan
genocide in the 1990s.DRC Prime Minister, Judith Suminwa
Rwanda rejects allegations
from Congo, the United Nations and Western powers that it supports M23 rebels
with arms and troops.
Suminwa urged the world to act
and to impose "dissuasive
sanctions" on Rwanda amid mass displacements and summary
executions.
"It is impossible to
describe the screams and cries of millions of victims of this conflict,"
she said.
UN
chief Antonio Guterres, at the Geneva meeting, said human rights around the
world were being "suffocated" and made reference to horrifying abuses
in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
"If this question of the
violation of territorial integrity isn't resolved, the situation could
degenerate," Suminwa told Reuters in a press briefing after her address to
the Council.
About 40,000
people have fled to Burundi, one of the nine countries that borders
the DRC, in two weeks to escape the fighting, the U.N. said on Friday.
Suminwa warned that the
worsening security situation with M23 and other armed groups could spill over
to neighbouring countries, posing a danger to them.
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