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ID119730
Title ProperConflict in Congo
LanguageENG
AuthorCamm, Megan
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Ituri, Democratic Republic of the Congo-It is July 20, 2010, and Djupanyahonoré is a ghost town populated by 644 ghosts. The heaped skeletons of its dwellings lie cold, but the acrid tang of burned houses pollutes the mountain air. Bending at their hips, the women of this northeastern hamlet scoop charred beans into the folds of their colorful pagnes, multi-purpose swaths of waxed cotton that serve at once as clothing, baby slings, and blankets. With laden skirts, they walk barefoot over blackened thatch to add their beans to a growing heap, where grandmothers with arthritic fingers pick out the edible ones. Old men sit silently in the shade while the young men rummage through rubble, excavating the remains of their huts' wooden supports. These will fuel the evening cooking fire and protect the oldest, youngest, and weakest members of the community from plummeting night temperatures. It's the rainy season, and at an altitude of over 5,500 feet, passing the night without shelter is hazardous.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Policy Journal Vol. 28, No.4; Winter 2011: p.70-80
Journal SourceWorld Policy Journal Vol. 28, No.4; Winter 2011: p.70-80
Key WordsDemocratic Republic of Congo ;  Djupanyahonore ;  United Nations ;  Indian UN peacekeepers