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The UN prepares to go to war for the first time, with a 3,000-strong task force sent to fight rebels in the Congo

The UN is about to go to war for the first time in its history after the Security Council voted unanimously to intervene to fight rebels in the Congo.

Around 3,000 UN troops wearing the blue insignia, are being deployed to the central African nation which has been wracked by years of civil war and lawlessness.

The UN has led a 14-year-long peacekeeping in a bid to end the ethic conflict which was sparked by the genocide in neighbouring Rwanda when thousands of Hutus fled into the Congo to evade justice.

Commander: Brazilian General Carlos Alberto Dos Santos Cruz (centre) arrives in the eastern Congolese city of Goma on Tuesday this week. He will lead a UN force against rebel fighters

Much of the fighting is now over the country's natural resources which include large quantities of gold, copper, diamonds, and coltan (a mineral used in cell phones).

According to the organisation World Without Genocide, the violence has killed as many as 5.4 million people making it the world's bloodiest conflict since World War II.

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The use of child soldiers in the conflict is also said to be common and in many areas armed gangs are free to roam at will terrorising local populations.

But until now the conflict has been largely ignored by the outside world.

It will be the first time that the UN itself will be in direct control of a fighting force, responsible for the tactics on the ground, troop deployments and air strikes.

UN peacekeepers in pictured in Bunia, Congo, in 2003. It will be the first time a UN force has gone to war in the history of the organisation

The force will be made up of soldiers from South Africa, Tanzania and Malawi and is under the command of Brazilian general Carlos Alberto dos Santos Cruz, who  is credited with dismantling criminal gangs in Haiti in 2007.

It will be deployed against M23 (March 23) rebels in the east of the country.

Speaking to the BBC last month General Santos Cruz said: 'The most critical area is nowadays the eastern part of the country.

UN CONCERNS OVER CONGO REBELS USING CHILD SOLDIERS

The United Nation has expressed grave concern over the recruitment of child soldiers by rebels in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

In a statement, the UN strongly condemned 'the recruitment and use of children and all forms of human rights violations that are committed by the March 23 movement (M23) and other armed groups against children.'

The statement also called on the M23 rebels fighting in the African country to stop the violence and abuse against children, adding that 'They will be held personally responsible for violations committed against children who are recruited in their ranks.'

Last year, a report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) revealed that a Congolese rebel general, wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on war crime charges, had forcefully recruited some 150 children.

According to the report, rebel leader General Jean Bosco Ntaganda, known by the nom-de-guerre 'Terminator' due to his brutal methods, kidnapped children and teens from their homes, schools, fields and the roadsides in the volatile east of the DRC.

Once joined the rebels, several of the boys were forced to walk ahead of the column of rebel soldiers to be the first to be shot in attacks, the report said.

'I am ready to face the most difficult of scenarios. The main objective is to relieve the suffering of the people.'

The Security Council has gone to considerable lengths to ensure unanimous approval for the action. Even Russia and China, normally reluctant to back such endeavours, voted in favour.

But it is not without risk with some fearing that allowing a UN force to intervene on one side in a civil war could do irreparable damage to the reputation of a supposedly impartial organisation. 

The M23 rebellion began in 2012 but has already led to around 800,000 people being forced to flee their homes.

Until recently neighbouring countries Rwanda and Uganda have been supporting the M23 rebels but have recently abandoned them following reports of atrocities and international condemnation of the movement.

Much of the Congo is rich in mineral wealth and has vast agricultural potential. But the years of conflict has meant it has fallen behind the rest of Africa in terms of economic development.

Early signs have been encouraging, with representatives of the M23 movement this week announcing that they want to resume peace talks with the government.

Rene Abandi, who heads the M23 delegation, said on Tuesday that they are 'committed' to the Uganda-mediated talks despite plans to deploy U.N. peacekeepers mandated to attack the rebels.

The rebels had earlier insisted the talks were hopeless amid such plans.

The change of tune illustrates the success of international military pressure on rebels who recently spoke of war if offensive peacekeepers were deployed in eastern Congo.

Rene Abandi, who heads the M23 delegation said the group was committed to peace talks.

He said: 'We are still committed to the dialogue, the ceasefire, and to solving the root cause of the conflict'.

The UN forces is to be deployed against M23 rebels in the east of the country

M23 rebel fighters rest as they withdraw near the town of Sake, some 42 km (26 miles) west of Goma. The rebellion, began in 2012 but has already led to around 800,000 people being forced to flee their homes

Representatives of the M23 movement this week announcing that they want to resume peace talks with the government

Congo's government and M23 have been negotiating in Uganda since December under the banner of a regional bloc called the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region, or ICGLR, of which Congo is a member and Uganda's president is the chair.

The talks have often been set back by accusations and counter-accusations about who is responsible for rampant violence in Congo's North Kivu province.

Last year regional leaders under the ICGLR framework asked the Congolese government to listen to the 'legitimate grievances' of rebels who now control huge chunks of territory in eastern Congo.

The leaders also urged M23 to stop seizing more territory.

The Security Council has gone to considerable lengths to ensure unanimous approval for the action. Even Russia and China, normally reluctant to back such endeavours, voted in favour

Jason Stearns, a Congo expert who runs the Usalama Project, a think tank that researches Congo's armed groups, said: 'The M23 is worried about the arrival of the intervention brigade - not so much by their military prowess, which remains relatively unknown, but by the political clout that Tanzania and South Africa, who are providing most of the soldiers, have.

'Still, they hope that (U.N. envoy) Mary Robinson's insistence on negotiations will make the government more flexible.'






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