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Marchers call for help to stop genocide

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  • Marchers call for help to stop genocide

    Marchers call for help to stop genocide
    The Portland group wants to raise awareness about conflict in the
    Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    By WILLA PLANK Staff Writer July 28, 2007

    Gordon Chibroski/Staff Photographer
    People from the Democratic Republic of the Congo cross Franklin
    Arterial on their way to Exchange Street on Friday to bring attention
    to violence in their home country. Latisha Runyambo, 10, far left, and
    Maggie Butoto, 17,lead the marchers, who attend International
    Christian Fellowship church in Portland.


    Ruth Mugisha does not know where her family is hiding amid rising
    violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo's eastern
    region. Most news she receives is from relatives in Rwanda.

    `All I know is that they are in the bushes,' Mugisha, 22, said about
    her family. `They are waiting for us to act. They don=80=99t have any
    hope where they are. They are surrounded by enemies.'

    Mugisha was among 65 marchers Friday in Portland working to raise
    awareness about intensified conflict in the eastern Democratic
    Republic of the Congo.

    `I'm here because I want people to know that my people are dying,'
    Mugisha said. `Their houses are burned. =80¦ Our country doesn't
    accept us.'

    According to the march organizers, the Congolese government and a
    military group called the Interahamwe, responsible for the 1994
    genocide in Rwanda, have increased efforts to exterminate the Tutsis
    in the country's eastern region. The Banyamulenge =80` those Congolese
    Tutsis who live in South Kivu - have been affected directly.

    The marchers, who included members of the Banyamulenge community and
    other supporters, walked from the International Christian Fellowship
    on Lafayette Street to the Old Port offices of U.S. Rep. Tom Allen and
    U.S. Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins. Marchers chanted
    traditional hymns, shouted phrases such as `Stop genocide' and held
    signs such as `Banyamulenge have the right to live. Machetes and fire
    kills as well as weapons of mass destruction.'

    Mugisha said people need to treat the Banyamulenge as any other
    people.

    Mugisha said that when she was a young girl, people would look at her
    differently just because she was Tutsi. Mugisha is originally from the
    Democratic Republic of the Congo, but moved to Rwanda when she was
    10. Tutsis are not accepted where she is from, she said.

    `Why do I have to be treated this way?' Mugisha said. Mugisha will be
    starting her second year at Southern Maine Community College. She
    plans to study interpreting and translation services.

    `I think the U.N. has the power to tell (Congo President Joseph)
    Kabila to stop this,' Mugisha said.

    Amani Sebaziga, who moved to Portland in 2004, has heard of his
    relatives hiding in churches.

    `Honestly, up to now I don't have any news,' Sebaziga said. `All I
    know is that they are in danger.'

    Sebaziga said the U.S. government should put pressure on the
    Democratic Republic of the Congo to stop the killings. Alan Cyr of
    Arundel said he has been friends with people in the Banyamulenge
    community for five years and has traveled to Africa.

    `Now they just want to make a statement for their people,'Cyr
    said. `It's a festering coal burning in the background.=80=9D Ainsley
    Wallace of Portland also said the people in this community are her
    closest friends.

    `We have the opportunity to stop (something) before it's too late like
    in Rwanda,' Wallace, 27, said.

    Justin Nsenga, one of the organizers, said he thinks the message was
    heard but that action is now needed.

    `The issue is to stop the genocide,' Nsenga said.


    Staff Writer Willa Plank can be contacted at 791-6326 or at:
    [email protected]
    Copyright © 2007 Blethen Maine Newspapers
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