Humanitarian groups respond to needs of expellees in western DR Congo
(New York: 21 April 2004) - In response
to the humanitarian needs of thousands of Congolese migrants who have been
expelled from Angola into the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), UN humanitarian
agencies and their non-governmental organization (NGO) partners conducted
an assessment mission to a town in DRC's Western Kasai Province yesterday.
The mission, led by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA), to Tshikapa, some 750 km from Kinshasa, has revealed urgent
humanitarian needs for food, health care, clean water and transport.
In response to needs in the affected
zones, the DRC's Ministry of Solidarity and Humanitarian Affairs is opening
2 humanitarian crisis cells. The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) is bringing
in other supplies including medical and water/sanitation equipment for
35,000 people. Medecins Sans Frontieres, Belgium (MSF-B), the main
NGO on the ground, is providing medical, transport, logistics and storage
support. OCHA in DRC has organised, led and financed 2 interagency
missions to the areas in the past week. In order to ensure the delivery
of humanitarian assistance to Kahungula, Bandundu Province, OCHA is tapping
into its Emergency Humanitarian Intervention fund to support MSF-Belgium
and local partners.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) continues to receive many reports of physical and psychological abuse of Congolese civilians by Angolans searching for hidden diamonds, including highly intrusive and public body searches on both adults and children. Instances of rape, torture, murder, arbitrary detention, and systematic theft of personal belongings have also been reported.
In the past few days, an additional 27,000 Congolese expellees have been registered in Bandundu and Western Kasai Provinces, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), bringing the total number of registered expellees to 67,000. This total does not include the thousands of people who do not pass through registration points. Aid agencies estimate that between 80,000-100,000 Congolese in total are in the process of being expelled into these two provinces.
The Congolese, many of whom have never set foot in Congo, arrive traumatised from their ordeal and with little, if any, means to support themselves. Some are reported to be walking more than 100km to arrive to relative safety while the pregnant, weak, sick and separated families are often left behind along the remote frontier where food, water and shelter are lacking, and to which access is extremely difficult. Many of the expellees are living in the streets, or seeking shelter in public buildings. Others are being taken care of by religious organizations and NGOs, who lack the supplies necessary to meet the needs of the rapidly growing population of expellees.