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DRC: Increased aid amidst violence in the north

Increased attacks on civilian population lead to an influx of displaced people


NEWS | 10 June 2009

In the areas of Haut-Uélé and Bas-Uélé, in the northeast of Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Ugandan rebels of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) have committed violent attacks in response to military operations launched by the armies of Uganda, DRC and South Sudan.

MSF is providing assistance to this abandoned population, which has been left to its fate in a highly isolated region. It has therefore decided to open two new projects. An MSF emergency team based in DRC started providing support to a health centre and two referral hospitals in Faradje and Niangara one week ago.

MSF has been working in this region since last September, notably at the hospital in Dungu. It has now decided to step up its activities in light of the increased attacks on the civilian population resulting in an influx of displaced people deprived of all medical assistance.

“In February, our teams carried out evaluation missions in different parts of the region, focusing on areas receiving little or no coverage from other humanitarian organizations, at least from a health aspect,” explains Amaury Grégoire, team coordinator. “The situation is critical. Health structures are either non-existent or in a deplorable state. There are few or no medicines available and those that are, are simply not affordable. We have also had to cope with a lack of medical staff; the majority have fled the violence along with the rest of the population.”

Support to hospitals and health centres

The MSF teams are therefore renovating the medical structures, training the medical staff still present and providing free healthcare for both the displaced and local populations (who have been sheltering the former for several months now). The nutritional situation also gives cause for concern: “In addition to a number of crops being destroyed by severe rains, the displaced populations, far from home, are not in a position to grow any food at all,” continues Grégoire.

In Niangara, close to 10,000 displaced people have found refuge in the town centre and 15,000 refugees have settled in the outskirts of the town. The MSF teams are providing support to the referral hospital and an outlying health centre, mainly treating malaria, acute respiratory infections and sexually transmitted infections, and seeing some 250 people a day in the hospital. Special consultations have been set up for the victims of sexual violence.

In Faradje, not far from the Sudanese border, several thousand people have taken refuge in three different sites. The MSF team has started supporting the general referral hospital, carrying out some much needed refurbishments to bring it up to standard. It has also installed water tanks, providing the hospitable with safe drinking water.

"The worst horrors"

According to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), the total number of refugees in Haut-Uélé and Bas-Uélé currently stands at around 190,000. "These people have fled terrible violence and lived through the worst horrors," Grégoire declares. "They have lost a father, a mother, a husband, a wife or a child. MOst of their villages have been burnt to the ground. They have been directly affected by the atrocities. Thousnads of people are suffering from the violence they hvae lived through or seen: some have been kidnapped, raped, beaten up or simply killed."

MSF has introduced special consultations for the victims of sexual violence. A psychologist will join the team soon to train the local personnel on providing psychological care to victims.

It is not only the displaced who need urgent humanitarian assistance in Haut-Uélé and Bas-Uélé. Many of the resident families offering them shelter are in an increasingly precarious situation themselves. “The displaced people have been offered shelter and help by the local families,” concludes Emmanuel Lampaert, the MSF medical team leader. “Initially, this is a positive thing, as it helps new arrivals to survive. However, in the long term, this system undermines the overall standard of living for both the displaced and the host families. And so it is an even bigger group of people who need help and their needs are huge.”


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