DR Congo's war has left more than two million dead
A further 15 people have been found dead after recent violence in the north-eastern town of Bunia in the Democratic Republic of Congo. This brings the total number killed to at least 90, many of them women and children discovered in two mass graves in the area on THursday and Friday.
A spokesman for the United Nations force in Kinshasa, Hamadoun Toure, said the latest victims were mostly soldiers, found in the town governor's residence on Sunday. The governor is reported to have fled.
Colonel Tim Watts, UN mission Rival rebel factions and ethnic militias battled for control of the town throughout the last week, and Ugandan soldiers were also reportedly involved in the violence.
A senior UN official flew to Uganda on Sunday to discuss the situation.
In February, the UN Security Council asked the Ugandan army to use its influence over the Congolese rebel group in Bunia to prevent such killings, but according to BBC correspondent Mark Dummett, local residents say it has completely failed in this task.
Mass Graves
The UN representative in DR Congo, Amos Namanga Ngongi, is due to discuss the deteriorating security situation around Bunia during talks in Kampala - including the alleged involvement of Ugandan troops.
In the worst clashes, Ugandan tanks were seen supporting the capture of the governor's office in Bunia in support of one of the militias.
Rebel soldiers clashed with tribal groups in Bunia An aid worker said 10,000 families had been forced to flee their homes because of the fighting and that many civilians were feared dead.
So far the final number killed is not known, and our correspondent says many of the rural areas outside Bunia are still inaccessible because of ongoing insecurity.
"There are bound to be more dead," said the chief of staff of the UN force, Colonel Tim Watts.
"The situation in Bunia is still pretty tense and our observers are unarmed, so it's difficult for them to go out and check," he said.
Mineral wealth
Congo's war, which has left an estimated two million dead, broke out in 1998.
Joseph Kabila signed a peace deal with Rwanda just two weeks ago The continuing fighting comes in spite of moves to work out a lasting peace agreement.
Less than two weeks ago, a peace deal was signed in South Africa between the Congolese President, Joseph Kabila, and one of the key players in the four-year old war, President Paul Kagame of Rwanda.
Mr Kagame has pledged to withdraw the thousands of troops he sent over the border in pursuit of Hutu rebels involved in the 1994 genocide of up to one million Tutsis and moderate Hutus.
But correspondents say the number of other factions involved make it doubtful whether a peace deal with Rwanda alone will be decisive in ending the war.
Thousands of other foreign troops remain in DR Congo - motivated primarily by the country's vast mineral deposits.
Uganda and Burundi have long supported rebel groups, and at various times Angola, Chad, Namibia and Zimbabwe - despite all having problems at home - have sent forces to back the government in Kinshasa.
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