The crash of mortars and crackling gunfire ripped through central Bunia yesterday as a vicious tribal war for the town re-ignited just one day after the arrival of 100 French special force troops, deployed in advance of a joint European peacekeeping force to pacify the Democratic Republic Congo's war-ravaged north eastern capital. In a virtual re-run of the battle for Bunia last month - when 700 UN peacekeepers stood by as hundreds of civilians were massacred, and 25,000 fled - the French troops remained at their airport barracks, without orders or capacity to intervene.
"We'll get around to it. We've got a memo in to Kofi. We're expecting a reply any time now..." | Thousands of Bunia's terrified residents poured back to the main UN compound they had only recently vacated, lugging their groaning wounded and hundreds of terrified, wailing children with them. But as the storm of bullets and grenades swept across the compound from all sides, this was a fragile refuge. Sprawling on the concrete floors, over 50 Western journalists cowered as bullets thudded into the walls and mortars exploded outside. Having flocked to Bunia in the expectation of seeing a triumphant French intervention, they found themselves depending on Bunia's humiliated Uruguayan UN peacekeepers, who fired not a round in return yesterday.
Their memo came back. It was in the wrong format, and they forgot to include an assistant deputy undersecretary on the routing... | Yesterday's death toll was impossible to estimate. Even as the fighting cooled in the afternoon, only five civilians and a handful of fighters were reported killed. With few of the losing side's kinspeople - the Lendu tribe - remaining in Bunia yesterday, a celebratory massacre by the victorious Hema fighters looked unlikely. Charged with explaining the UN's latest failure to quell the bitter war in Congo's Ituri province, French commander Col Daniel Vollot said: 'Our mandate has not changed. We are trying to impede the fighting through negotiations. We went between the lines, we spoke to the soldiers, to the leaders, but no one wants to talk, they want to fight.'
Then you should give them a fight, dammit! Goddamn bureaucrats with berets... | The battles began shortly after dawn. A rabble of Lendu attacked the main Hema militia, the Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC), which had driven them from Bunia last month. This battle was different: a rival Hema militia was reported to be fighting alongside the Lendus, turning the usual portrayal of Ituri's war as age-old and ethnic on its head. As over 1,000 Lendu fighters swept into the south-eastern suburb of Kinja, the UPC's fighters panicked and ran. Bullets zipped through Kinja's empty streets as one UPC commander berated his men: 'Turn and fight, you women! Kill the Lendus, kill them.' The Hema fighters were unconvinced. 'There are dead, there are wounded, the enemy is too numerous, the fighting is too hot,' one cried.
"Run away! Bravely run away!" | Briefly the fleeing militiamen threatened to run through the UN compound, spurring the Uruguayans to advance and level their guns. But the peacekeepers allowed fleeing civilians to pour through their ranks and huddle against the compound's razor-wire perimeter. 'We're fleeing because the Lendus are close,' said Maeve Wivine, 32. 'We don't know who's shooting.'
"Don't care, either. All bullets taste the same..." | As the Lendus advanced on the compound, the UPC counter-attacked, firing over the cowering fugitives, journalists and peacekeepers in thunderous hour-long bursts studded by inexplicable moments of calm. 'Where are the French?' asked one blue-helmeted Uruguayan. |