After a week of battle, the rebels supported Rwanda are almost completely dominated by sesame, 2 million cities in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
The hospital is overflowing in the cities of the city of the injured and the dead. Sesame residents are starting to appear from hidden places and are desperately looking for water and food. And the Congo army, which had been protected, was defeated.
On Thursday, in the yard outside of sesame stadium, Rwanda’s supported M23 rebels loaded more than 1,000 soldiers caught in the truck bed, where men were standing together. Most were wearing a captured uniform. Many of them were furious.
However, the curse they spit were not directed at their prisoners. Rather, President Congo, Felix Ziskedy, was a military commander who accused them sold out and abandoned them. Their commander is watched with government officials, and is watched in a video or photo early in the morning on Monday in the morning when the M23 arrives in the city, boarding a vehicle or photo, across the moonlight lake. He left the man and left the battle alone.
Many of the truck soldiers were fighting with armed groups, known as the Wazarendo. However, no reinforcement was sent.
“TSHISEKEDI pays this,” shouted.
“We will catch him with our own,” said another person.
“God will repay him,” said another person.
Commander of the 231st Infantry Battalion of the Congo Army, known for the French initials Fardc, climbed from one cabin in a truck where his seniority has won a comfortable place to him. Colonel John Asagi, the captured commander, explained that there was no choice but to surrender. The M23 said that they took them somewhere and gave them some training, and they added that they would do whatever their new master has now ordered.
“If we were sent to fight Fed,” he said, “We will fight Fard.”
When the M23 rebel prepared for the truck departure and walked around the garden, they looked like the army with the Rena bullets, fatigue, and helmets promoted the rocket, but the Congo soldiers were tired. It looked like a rug tag anti -government forces.
Reversion, which is already dominating the vast area of the Congo, which is rich in minerals, will march to Kinshasa, a capital of nearly 1000 miles west, and will take over the whole country.
The rebels had already handed over Hundreds of Romanian Mercc soldiers in Rwanda.
Hundreds of civilians stood around trucks full of soldiers, saw the reversal of this role, and often saw the men in charge. Dozens of women and children have just found their husband and father among the truck men, and they were crying.
“I don’t know where they are taking him,” she cried at her back, with her baby on her back and the other three children. She said she came from the 270 -mile Fiji of Sesame, and she lost everything last week by attacking Minoba. They looked for evacuation centers at school, but they couldn’t stay.
“We were kicked out of the school,” said Shifa. “How do you survive? How do you return these children to Fiji?”
In the latter half of Thursday, the rebels leader Konayu Nanga gave Goma citizens a new real taste under powerful militia. Some experts say It has been supported by up to 4,000 Rwanda troops, counting 6,000 units in the eastern part of Congo.
“Please go back to normal activities,” Nanga told sesame residents at a two -hour press conference at a local hotel. He was sandwiched between helmets and Batrigear men.
However, the situation of sesame, a city built around a nearby live volcano, is a city, is far from normal.
The corpse is on the street. Stores, supermarkets, and humanitarian warehouses have been looted. Cholera has broken out. People who have been wounded by bullet -surviving people can finally go to the clinic for treatment, just find medical science and surgical staff.
And many families divided when they escaped, have not yet found each other.
Elyséemopanda tracked her two children in chaos. The rebel had a husband, soldiers and prisoners. Last week’s events left her family on the abandoned IN.
“I don’t know where to go,” she said.
Many sesame of sesame is in a very unstable situation, as injured, HAR, hungry, thirsty or lost.
The most vulnerable is the sesame evacuees, hundreds of thousands of people.
For more than a year, people escape from the rebel forward through the countryside of East Congo and small towns, seek sesame and evacuation shelters in their surroundings, and evacuate in a vast, unsanitary camp that is particularly dangerous for women and girls. I am doing it.
Last week, the M23 was closed in these camps, so thousands of people who had barely survived fled from the collision and carried the small people in their heads to sesame.
Three families who escaped one of the camps just outside the sesame Education centerSurvived with some beans and rice.
Without the kindness, “I don’t know how we survived,” said Furaha Kabasele, a 34 -year -old mother, only five months old.
They survived this dangerous week. But they don’t know what to do now.
The most approaching need for many people is water. The water supply of the city, its power and the Internet have been reduced during the battle of sesame. People who had no water begged for a $ 5.ker for Jerican, which usually costs 20 cents.
As the battle calmed down, hundreds of people gathered water toward the end of Lake Kib, adding small chlorine to prevent hydroidy diseases.
One of the things to put water on Thursday morning was Mukendi (13 years old), who carried two dirty yellow Jerican to the lake shore and took off the flip flop. As if the battle had burned up, his family was drinking and drinking.
“We couldn’t leave the house because the gunshots and bombs fell,” he said.
He had a hard time filling the can and hugging them from the lake.