UN Feeds over 18,000 Congolese Victims of Attacks by Ugandan Rebels
New York, Dec 31 2008 4:10PM
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has delivered emergency supplies for more than 18,000 displaced people in
the strife-torn eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) who are victims of violence at the hands of the notorious
Ugandan rebel group known as the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA).
The aid, delivered both by air and by land, was distributed together with the non-governmental organization (NGO)
Caritas in Orientale Province in and around the town of Dungu, which is situated near the DRC’s borders with Sudan and
Uganda, WFP said in an update today.
The LRA has attacked several communities, killing civilians, burning homes and abducting civilians. With new massacres
perpetrated by the LRA having been reported, WFP said the need for humanitarian assistance could jump significantly in
the coming weeks.
The rebel group is “attacking just ordinary villages,” UN Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes told reporters in New
York today, adding that protecting civilians is “extremely difficult.”
The UN peacekeeping mission in the DRC, known as MONUC, is already “extremely overstretched” in the eastern DRC and has
a limited number of forces in the Dungu area, but is “doing its best under those circumstances” to protect people, he
said.
The UN hopes to “get across to the LRA that they will be held accountable,” Mr. Holmes, who also serves as
Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, said.
MONUC said it cannot estimate the number of people killed due to the remoteness and lack of communications in the
region, but local and humanitarian officials said nearly 200 people had been killed during the Christmas period alone.
The LRA, which has been fighting Ugandan forces since the 1980s and has since spilled over into Sudan and DRC, are
notorious for human rights abuses including the killing and maiming of civilians, and the abduction and recruitment of
children as soldiers and sex slaves.
Yesterday, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon strongly condemned the “appalling atrocities” reportedly committed by LRA in
the eastern DRC and southern Sudan, and demanded that they respect all rules of international humanitarian law.
In a statement issued by his spokesperson, he called on the Ugandan, DRC and southern Sudanese forces on the ground to
coordinate with the humanitarian community and UN missions in the region to ensure the effective delivery of aid to
those affected by the LRA attacks.
WFP and its partners seek to reach some 800,000 people in the eastern DRC who have been driven from their homes by
fighting in recent months among Government forces (FARDC), the mainly Tutsi rebel group known as the Congress in Defence
of the People (CNDP), the mainly Hutu Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), among other groups which
have repeatedly clashed in various permutations and shifting alliances.
Over half a million people have been uprooted in North Kivu Province since the clashes began escalating in the second
half of this year. In both North and South Kivu Provinces, skirmishes are continuing among armed groups, and insecurity
and poor road conditions are still thwarting the delivery of aid.
WFP said today that while there is enough food to cover immediate needs in eastern DRC, it foresees a shortfall of
22,000 metric tons over the next six months.
Meanwhile, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) urged the international community to not turn a blind eye to the suffering of
women and children in the region.
Sexual violence and exploitation have been rampant and taking place without impunity in villages and camps for
internally displaced persons (IDPs), with women and girls reporting being raped both within sites and when venturing out
for firewood, water and food.
In Kibati camp in North Kivu, soldiers abducted and tried to rape two girls, and shot one dead and sent the other
fleeing. Both of these girls had taken part in the UNICEF-backed child-friendly space programme.
“UNICEF urges the authorities to protect all children and adults from sexual violence, whether perpetrated by parties to
the conflict or civilians,” said Pierrette Vu Thi, a representative for the agency in the DRC.
“Prevention of sexual violence requires the commitment of the Government, armed forces, and groups, and community
leaders to reduce the risks that girls and women face and to proactively promote a zero tolerance position toward sexual
violence and abuse.”
ENDS