Over 2,000 bodies bow require burial in Goma after Rwanda-backed M23 rebels took over the Democratic of Congo city, inflaming a decade-old conflict and humanitarian crisis.
Congo’s communications minister Patrick Muyaya on Tuesday confirmed the mass burial, adding that relative calm has returned to Goma, where the rebel alliance that includes M23 declared a ceasefire for humanitarian reasons.
However, some residents still reported sporadic shooting and looting and the scale of the civilian cost is emerging after reports of people caught in crossfire, overwhelmed hospitals and bodies lying on the street.
Muyaya told a news briefing the number of bodies to be buried “gave an overview of massacres committed in the city”.
Goma, east Congo’s largest city, is home to lucrative gold, tin and coltan mines.
The United Nations said at least 900 people were killed and almost 3,000 people injured in days of fighting.
M23 is the latest in a long line of Rwandan-backed rebel movements to emerge in Congo’s volatile eastern borderlands after two successive wars stemming from Rwanda’s 1994 genocide.
NAN reports that Rwanda denies supporting the well-trained and heavily armed Tutsi-led group.
The escalation in January worsened a humanitarian crisis that has driven hundreds of thousands to seek shelter in Goma after fleeing fighting between M23 and Congolese troops.
According to the UN World Food Programme, more than 700,000 people were displaced in Goma in January.
The UN has accused both the M23 and the Congolese army of recent human rights abuses, including summary executions and rape. They have not responded to requests for comment.
In Goma, aid groups have been helping authorities relieve overflowing hospital morgues and bury bodies amid concerns of disease spreading.
“The land where bodies can be buried in Goma is extremely limited,” Myriam Favier, head of the International Committee of the Red Cross sub-delegation in Goma, said.
The top UN aid official in Congo, Bruno Lemarquis, called for the urgent reopening of Goma’s airport to allow for humanitarian flights.