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Congo ProjectNOTE: A Google map has been created by Keith Gustafson, PCP part-time staffer and ECC missionary. This map shows all the principal sites where the PCP is working with the CEUM. Zoom and Satellite features are available. Follow this link to the map: http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msa=0&msid=106113482486755048743.0004544c69207f4991f4c A similar map is available in PDF format, scanned from a portion of a DRC map published by Cartographia (2nd ed.), with CEUM/PCP sites added by PCP staff. Access this PDF map here: Ubangi Region Map
Congo has made the news during the past few years -- but go: The Hidden Toll of the World's Dead- liest War." Shortly before that, CNN reported on a study published in the British medical journal Lancet, documenting that hidden toll. Four million people died in or as a result of the civil strife in the Democratic Republic of Congo between 1998 and 2004, making it the deadliest war the world has seen since World War II. And the dying continues. A peace agreement signed in 2002 reduced the violence but did not end it. According to a report released by the International Rescue Committee in January 2008 (reported in our News section), the death toll now stands at 5.4 million. Each month 45,000 Congolese die from war-related causes--1,500 people every day. Some meet violent deaths; many die of disease and starvation that are among the war's legacies. Nearly half of them are children. The diseases are "preventable and easily treatable," according to the IRC--but there are few resources to treat them. The death rate is 40 percent higher than the average for sub-Sarahan Africa. In the words of the Time article, "Some wars go on killing long after they end." As reported by Foreign Affairs magazine, in the 2007 Failed States Index Congo now stands at number 7 out of 177 countries ranked--an improvement over its previous number 2 spot, but still above such countries as Afghanistan and Bangladesh. (Sudan remains the number-one failed state.)
In June 2004 the Paul Carlson Partnership launched its Congo Project. Drawing on seven decades of experience in Congo, the PCP formed partnerships with leaders of the Communauté Évangélique de l’Ubangi-Mongala (the Congolese Covenant church, known as the CEUM) and with individuals in the U.S. who have spent many years living and working in Congo. Together we identified extensive needs health, poverty, and education. We have seen generous gifts and real successes. Here are just a few of them:
The Paul Carlson Partnership5101 N. Francisco Ave., Chicago, IL 60625773-907-3302; info@paulcarlson.org![]()
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