The war that began in 1998 and ended in 2003 is also known as the Great African War. It was and remains Africa’s deadliest war with estimates of up to 5 million deaths. The estimate includes 2 million deaths caused directly by the armed conflict and up to 3 million caused indirectly.
To understand the second Congo war you have to look at the first Congo war that had ended in 1997.The seeds for the bloodier second war were sown in the first one, and the issues fought for were the same.
So let’s take a quick look at the first Congo war. We covered the Rwanda genocide in a previous video. That conflict and its consequences played a big role in the both Congo wars. After the 1994 Rwanda genocide and the victory of the Tutsi RPF, Hutus fled to neighboring Congo fearing retaliatory attacks. They fled under the cover of French Army to UN camps set up in the DRC, then called Zaire. These Hutu civilians were mixed with armed Interahamwe militias.
The leader of the RPF and vice president of Rwanda, Paul Kagame asked the international community to separate the unarmed civilians from armed extremist militias as the entered the DRC. His requests went unheeded and both innocent civilians and extremists were admitted into the UNHCR refugee camps at the border. Over one million Hutu refugees fled into Zaire.
The Hutu extremists and their leaders regrouped in the UNHCR refugee camps and began cross border attacks into Rwanda before retreating into the DRC. The corrupt Mobutu government refused to do anything to stop these attacks and in fact covertly supported them. This angered the newly formed Rwandese government. The Mobutu government had supported the Habyarimana government and its army was hostile to the RPF (Rwanda Patriotic Front) which now controlled Rwanda.
Another concern for Rwanda was the Banyamulenge, a population of Congolese Tutsis that had lived mostly homogenously but peacefully in Congo. This group fearing another ethnic cleansing by the Hutu extremists