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Congo rebels say Sudan undermines peace efforts with attack
August 5, 1999
KIGALI, Rwanda -- Rebel groups in Congo say Sudanese bombers attacked two villages, killing more than 500 in the Wednesday raid and indicating Sudan was trying to undermine peace efforts in the yearlong African civil war. Rebel groups and their supporters in Rwanda and Uganda signed a cease-fire agreement with the government of Congolese President Laurent Kabila and his backers -- Zimbabwe, Angola and Namibia -- last month. Analysts said Sudan might want to derail the cease-fire to keep neighboring Uganda -- a longtime rival -- from supporting a rebel movement in southern Sudan. Sudan has denied supporting Kabila's government and did not sign the pact. Rebel leader Jean-Pierre Bemba accused Sudan on Thursday of acting on Kabila's behalf. "I consider the cease-fire is broken. It has been broken by Kabila himself while all my troops were on the defensive," said Bemba, a millionaire businessman who heads the Congolese Liberation Movement, one of the two rebel armies. Bemba said Wednesday's air raid on two fishing villages was the work of a high-altitude Sudanese bomber. The towns, Makanza and Bogbonga, are about 800 kilometers (500 miles) northeast of the Congolese capital Kinshasa. Sudan struggles with its own warSudan, which is fighting its own civil war, has not yet commented on the allegation. The Sudanese government declared a cease-fire in its own battle against rebels in its southern provinces Thursday, an offer the rebel group rejected. A senior aid official in Nairobi, Kenya, called Sudan's involvement in the Congolese war "a token effort," but added: "Sudan is trying to hit the Ugandans where they can because they are their enemy. The Sudanese government is very happy to have the Ugandans tied up." Kabila has made at least two trips to Khartoum, the Sudanese capital, since the start of the war in August 1998, and even if Sudan has played a smaller role in the fighting. Uganda supports Bemba's force in northern Congo, where the Sudanese are accused of striking. By keeping alive the Congo war, Sudan would prevent Uganda from helping the Sudan People's Liberation Army. The SPLA has fought a 16-year war against Khartoum for religious freedom and self-determination for south Sudan. "They feel that they can use Congo to attack us in (the south Sudan province of) Western Equatoria from behind," said Samson Kwaje, spokesman for the SPLA's political wing. Reuters contributed to this report. RELATED STORIES: Rebel leader claims air raid on Congolese fishing towns RELATED SITES: Links - Zairean Civil War and "the New Congo"
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