UNICEF calls for action on Congo terror
Numbers of civilians displaced by fighting skyrockets
GENEVA/NEW YORK, 15 February 2005 - UNICEF says that the number of civilians uprooted by fighting in Ituri district,
Eastern Congo since the beginning of this year has risen dramatically over the past week.
Although some 50,000 civilians had fled attacks on their villages by the first week of February, monitors had reported
an additional 30 to 35 000 displaced by 15 February.
Speaking from New York, the UNICEF Executive Director, Carol Bellamy, says that the rise in fighting is “a serious
threat to the peace process, and a lethal step backwards for Congo’s children.”
“We need to bring the same sense of urgency to the Congo that we brought to the tsunami, in order to stop the killing of
children,” said Bellamy. “This is a country that was moving towards a peace process, with the promise of elections this
June. Renewed attacks against civilians puts the transitional process at risk, and are a disaster for Congolese
children.”
The fighting in the Democratic Republic of Congo is one of the bloodiest conflicts the world has known since the Second
World War. In less than six years, an estimated 3.8 million people are thought to have been killed. The vast majority of
them are civilians, and the majority of those most probably children.
Many have been killed in fighting, but a far greater number have died of disease and starvation. As homes, hospitals and
schools have been destroyed, families and communities trying to escape the fighting found themselves without food,
water, shelter or other basic services. Some 1.4 million children suffer from some form of malnutrition.
The area most affected by current bout of fighting is the territory of Djugu just north of Bunia. Villages have been
looted and burned down by armed factions linked to different ethnic groups. Interviews with terrified civilians confirm
that there have been widespread killings, rapes, and looting.
Katya Marino, a UNICEF Education officer in Bunia who had just returned from an assessment to one of four new sites
hosting displaced people, said that families continue to enter the site each day. “As soon as you leave Bunia, there is
no security beyond those few sites protected by the UN peacekeeping forces. There are armed men, there is a sense of
terror, and it is very difficult for us to reach people who need our help.”
UNICEF is undertaking a major relief operation to assist the estimated 50,000 people who have managed to reach the
safety of four sites, which are guarded by UN troops. The interventions cover the provision of safe water, access to
sanitation facilities, the provision of shelter and cooking materials as well as the distribution of high protein
biscuits for vulnerable children. As of Saturday, UNICEF through its partners had distributed basic household items to
over 11,000 families with plans for further distribution to another 5,000 families in the coming days.
Planning is underway to vaccinate children against measles and to start an education programme.
UNICEF is seeking 34.6 million USD for its 2005 emergency operation.