United Nations peacekeepers have been criticised for supporting a government military offensive in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
刚果民主共和国的联合国维和部队因支持政府军事攻势而遭批评。
Thousands have been displaced in the Democratic Republic of Congo
A joint1(联合的,共同的) report by several international aid agencies said the mission had had "disastrous2" humanitarian3 consequences.
It said the offensive against ethnic4 Hutu rebels in eastern DR Congo had caused widespread killings5 and rape6.
The Congolese and international lobby groups said the UN needed to take immediate7 action to protect civilians9.
The Congo Advocacy Coalition10 report said disarming11(使人松弛的) the Hutu rebels is a top priority - but that for every rebel who has been disarmed12 this year, one civilian8 has been killed, seven women or girls raped13, and 900,000 people made homeless.
Rapes14 and murder
The UN supplies, transports and - in some cases pays - the Congolese government army as part of international efforts to rebuild the country after many years of war.
It is currently backing a government army offensive against the FDLR rebels now based in eastern DR Congo but originally from neighbouring Rwanda, where some of them took part in the genocide of 1994.
Since January, it has also been reported that more than 1,000 civilians have been killed, 7,000 women and girls have been raped, and more than 6,000 homes have been burned down in the eastern provinces of North and South Kivu.
The coalition(联合,合并) urged diplomats15 and UN officials to discuss the situation during a scheduled meeting in Washington DC this week.
Some of the violence has been reprisals16(报复性没收,拘押) carried out by the Hutu rebels, the report said, but Congolese government soldiers had also targeted civilians through killings, rape and looting.
The report includes satellite pictures of villages in eastern DR Congo taken before and after the government offensive and rebel reprisals.
The pictures show apparently17 busy villages reduced to abandoned, burnt-out huts.
Marcel Stoessel, who leads aid organisation18 Oxfam's operations in the area, said: "The human rights and humanitarian consequences of the current military operation are simply disastrous.
"UN peacekeepers, who have a mandate19(命令,要求) to protect civilians, urgently need to work with government forces to make sure civilians get the protection they need, or discontinue their support."
The coalition said the UN had failed to use its influence to stop the government army employing commanders with a known record of human rights abuses.
Anneke Van Woudenberg, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, said the UN needed to use its clout20(巨大的影响).
She said: "The UN needs to make it clear that if the Congolese government wants its continued military support, the army should remove abusive(辱骂的,虐待的) soldiers from command positions and its soldiers should stop attacking civilians."