Jan Egeland and Ulrika Blom, Country Director NRC DRC in Beni, North Kivu. 

Only two months into 2018, and North Kivu province is returning as a hotspot in the crisis. A resurgence of inter-communal fighting and violent clashes between armed groups caused a dangerous spike in displacement in 2017. Some 1.2 million people are now displaced in the province – the highest number in any area in the country.

“Despite the resurgence of violence in North Kivu, critical funding is being pulled out of the province and into other areas, deemed by the UN as higher priority. Aid agencies are forced to juggle dwindling resources. It’s a life-threatening lottery on who wins and who loses – with lethal stakes. Areas that lose face sickness, disease and ultimately death,” said Egeland.

“The priority for DRC is a massive scale-up of funding and of aid workers in conflict areas, including North Kivu. Otherwise, the humanitarian community won’t be able to cope and will face certain calamity. We are already overwhelmed by what feels like a continent of crises, and we as humanitarians are so few and with no means to help.
Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council Jan Egeland and Country Director Ulrika Blom were visiting Beni, North Kivu, together earlier this year. Photo: NRC

Violence spiralling to alarming levels in Eastern Congo

Published 22. Oct 2018
Humanitarian agencies are struggling to respond to rapidly mounting needs in Eastern Congo.

Press statement by Ulrika Blom, Country Director for the Norwegian Refugee Council in DR Congo: 

"We are deeply concerned by the rapidly escalating and increasingly dangerous violence in Eastern DR Congo. 

In Beni in North Kivu, an area affected by Ebola, violence is now spiralling to horrifying levels. Twelve people were killed and 15 people were kidnapped this weekend in Beni, a town that has been under repeated armed attacks over the last two months. Whole areas of the town have been emptied because people are fleeing to find safety. Farmers are too afraid to access their fields by fear of being killed.

On the Ruzizi plain in South Kivu, clashes between armed groups risk limiting humanitarian agencies’ access to the southern part of the province, where the humanitarian needs are pressing. 

Alarm bells have been ringing for quite some time in DR Congo and the world has continued to hit the snooze button. If the world does not answer the call of the 13.1 million people in need across the country, and quickly, we fear they will suffer fatal consequences in the very near future. 

The increased violence and displacement put serious pressure on the already overstretched humanitarian resources. Since 2016, the humanitarian situation in DR Congo has gravely deteriorated, yet international funding and attention have not matched the exploding needs. So far this year, donor countries have only contributed with 28 per cent of the necessary funding to meet the most pressing humanitarian needs. 

We call for the international community to urgently scale up the humanitarian operations in DR Congo".

 

Photos for free use are available here: https://nrc.smugmug.com/Country-Programmes/DRC/2018/n-ntntSj/Jan-Egeland-visit-to-DRC/i-WRD2BK9   

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