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‘There is indescribable fear in everyone’s eyes’

Katharine Derderian has just returned from the Haut-Uélé district in north-eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where she coordinated MSF's activities. In this interview, she talks about the climate of fear which reigns in this region where Ugandan rebels from the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) are in conflict with Congolese armed forces.


Democratic Republic of Congo | 21 August 2009

WHAT IS THE SITUATION IS THIS PART OF DRC?

Since September 2008, LRA rebels from neighbouring Uganda have committed acts of extreme violence against people in Haut-Uélé and Bas-Uélé provinces in north-eastern DRC. In March, the situation deteriorated further when countries in the region launched a joint military offensive against the LRA. Today, several regions in northern DRC, southern Sudan and Central African Republic are affected by violence. Violence against civilians continues, and access for humanitarian organizations is difficult due to the high level of insecurity. What is happening today in north-eastern DRC and southern Sudan is a serious neglected crisis.

WHAT IS MSF DOING THERE?

I was in charge of the MSF project in the towns of Niangara and Faradje, in Haut-Uélé. In Niangara, MSF supports a referral hospital with around fifty beds, where we offer medical and psychological care for victims of sexual assault. On the other bank of the river Uélé, which cuts through the town, we work in a health centre. In total, the Niangara team carries out 800 medical consultations per week. In Faradje, we support a 40-bed health centre, where the team carries out 500 weekly consultations and offers psychosocial help to those people who have lived through traumatic events. Other MSF teams work in Dungu, Dingila and Doruma. In total, 130 Congolese and 21 international employees work in MSF projects in Haut-Uélé and Bas-Uélé provinces.

WHAT HAPPENS TO PEOPLE WHO’VE BEEN DISPLACED BY VIOLENCE?

According to official estimates, 250,000 people have fled the violence in northern DRC and tens of thousands of others have crossed the border seeking refuge in southern Sudan. In Faradje, 4,000 displaced people live in three camps and in Niangara, there are around 10,000 displaced people who are looked after by the local population. Living standards for the people who come from these areas are poor, but I saw a huge amount of solidarity between these residents and the newly displaced. The problem is that now, living conditions are getting worse for everyone - not just the displaced, but the original population too.

Because there is so little humanitarian presence, the local people are doing what they can, giving displaced people housing, food and clothes –sometimes to people who speak an entirely different language. One woman I met told me that people had fled their villages in the night or early in the morning in such fear that they hadn’t even dressed; they had simply run for their lives. Displaced people in the towns where we work would point to the clothes they had on and tell us that they had been given them when they arrived here. And because everything is shared, both the displaced people and the local population find themselves in an ever more fragile situation, with less food, and fewer means to cope. Everyone shares everything, including abject poverty.

CAN THE DISPLACED PEOPLE RETURN HOME?

A few people have tried to return home but this is a very small minority. What they find when they return often prevents them from staying: their houses have been burned, their belongings looted, and insecurity is rife. Most of the displaced people are scared and stay in towns or camps, since they feel safer ‘in numbers.’ When there isn’t enough food, some people try to return to their fields in order to survive. But it is clear that the previous harvest, which was ready in March-April, has been lost. Most of the displaced people were unable to sow seeds for the next harvest, which is due now, because of insecurity and fear.

DO YOU SENSE THIS FEAR WHEN YOU INTERRACT WITH PEOPLE?

The attacks have been ongoing since September 2008, including an attack in Faradje on Christmas day. You see an indescribable fear in everyone's eyes.

The fear is so persistent because almost everyone has been affected by violence of some kind, either themselves or people they know – murder, rape, kidnapping. It is fear of violence from all sides, fear of attacks late at night and in the early morning that leaves you sleepless, fear of losing your children to kidnapping, fear of having to leave behind your home and your land in a culture where people will tell you first of all that they are farmers, or that everything used to be fine as long as they had fields so they could eat.

During medical consultations, the MSF team treats malaria, respiratory infections and sexually transmitted infections, but also cases of gastritis or non-specific pain. These latter diagnoses are indicators of stress.

In addition to medical care, we have a psychosocial support program. In this region, nearly everyone you meet has lived through traumatic events. Over the past few weeks in the Faradje health centre we started to see a growing number of children who had been kidnapped by LRA rebels to act as carriers, fighters or sex slaves. We have provided care for 108 children, both boys and girls, aged from roughly 9 to 18. We give them a place to sleep, space to play and individual support from an MSF psychologist. I was pleasantly surprised to see how much they improve.

ARE AID ORGANIZATIONS IN A POSITION TO MEET PEOPLE’S NEEDS?

Due to the insecurity and the lack of roads, it is very difficult for humanitarian organizations to work in the region. For those same reasons, MSF has to travel mostly by air. Today, humanitarian aid is largely unable to meet people’s needs, whether they have been displaced or are from this area. That is why we continue to plead with other humanitarian organizations to come and set up a permanent presence here in Haut-Uélé and Bas-Uélé.

The presence of organizations like MSF brings not only medical and humanitarian aid, but also a degree of normality. I will tell you an anecdote: when we arrived in Niangara for the first time, the hospital was operating as best it could, but it was in a pitiful condition, surrounded by very long grass. While kick-starting the medical activities, the MSF team also started cutting the grass. Over the next few days, and still today, we noticed that all over town, people were cutting the grass. I found that very symbolic.


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