During the
Second Congo War, the
Ituri conflict occurred in the
Ituri Region alongside
Lake Albert and the
Ugandan border. The Ituri conflict was fought between two non-governmental informally organised ethnic groups, the
Lendu and
Hema, that had caused the deaths of thousands of people by 2003.
2003 Ituri conflict fighting In 2003, Lendu and Hema
militias were battling for control of the town after
Ugandan troops withdrew after the signing of a peace agreement, and Congolese police fled. During discussions regarding the deployment of an international force, UN Security Council diplomats were mindful of a repetition of the
Rwandan genocide in 1994. Following a series of massacres, including the
Bogoro attack of February 2003, and reports by the
United Nations Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC) of serious human rights abuses, the
Security Council adopted the
Resolution 1484 on 30 May 2003 and authorised the deployment of a French led Interim Multinational Emergency Force (IMEF) to the regional capital of
Bunia.
UN observer mission and withdrawal of Ugandan troops In the beginning of 2003, the
United Nations Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC) observer teams present in that country since 1999, monitored serious combats and human rights violations in
Ituri province where the Ituri conflict had been unfolding for the previous four years. The withdrawal of 7,000
Ugandan troops in April 2003 led to a deteriorating security situation in the Ituri region, endangering the peace process in DRC. In April 2003, 800 Ugandan soldiers were deployed in
Bunia and one observer died in a mine explosion. In May 2003, two military observers were killed by a militia. == Intervention ==