Leontine Ntabanga and Samuel Mugabo, nurses in DRC, prepare medication. Democratic Republic of Congo, 2023. ©Michel Lunanga/MSF © Michel Lunanga/MSF
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DRC: MSF calls for a rapid and tangible increase in humanitarian aid in response to North Kivu crisis

Some 600,000 displaced people are living in desperate conditions, with inadequate access to food and exposed to violence in camps around Goma, in the North Kivu region. Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)’s medical teams have witnessed alarming rates of malnutrition and mortality in some of the camps. UN agencies recently announced they would be stepping up their efforts to meet the needs of people in the east of the country. These intentions urgently need to be translated into additional assistance and protection in line with displaced people’s needs.

For several months now, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has noted the slow pace of deployment and the inadequate level of aid provided to people who have fled their homes following the fighting due to the resurgence of the M23 armed group. Despite a certain increase in humanitarian aid in the past weeks, the approximately 600,000 people[1] currently living in several sites surrounding Goma continue to lack assistance, particularly concerning food and shelter, which remain insufficient in quantity and quality.

On June 16, the UN announced it will be raising the severity of the crisis to the highest level on the scale of UN organizations. This is a positive sign, but this awareness urgently needs to be translated into a significant, rapid and tangible increase in the aid provided to people in the camps.

Inside view of the MSF’s clinic in Rusayo camp. DRC, 2023. © MSF

A retrospective mortality survey carried out by MSF in April in Rusayo, Shabindu and Don Bosco camps, covering the period from January to April, revealed alarming mortality rates among children under five. In Rusayo, where the population is estimated at between 85,000 and 100,000, more than three children died on average every day (1.6 deaths per 10,000 children per day) from various causes during this period.

In Elohim, which had a population of around 4,000 at the time of a rapid nutritional survey carried out at the end of May, MSF has collected data that revealed malnutrition rates well above emergency thresholds, with rates of severe acute malnutrition reaching 4.9 per cent among children under five. In May, one in four children in the Elohim camp were treated by MSF for malnutrition. In this same camp, many displaced people report having received no food assistance since their arrival, in some cases as long ago as January. At other camps, such as Rusayo and Shabindu, some food has been distributed, but not to all residents. This alarming situation is compounded by several risk factors such as cases of measles and cholera in the camp.

The shortage of food is also impacting the health of adults, especially women, who often have to leave the camps during the day to look for food or firewood, exposing themselves to the risk of violence, particularly sexual violence. In early May, MSF raised the alarm over the high number of women treated by its teams for sexual violence: in two weeks, 674 women from Bulengo, Lushagala, Kanyaruchinya, Elohim, Munigi and Rusayo camps reported having experienced sexual violence. Currently, still an average of 40 women a day report being a victim of sexual violence in these same sites. Although humanitarian organizations appear to be aware of the gravity of the situation, aid and protection measures are currently benefiting only a small proportion of sexual violence survivors. The safety of civilians inside and outside the camps must be urgently ensured.

“This catastrophic situation is even more incomprehensible given its proximity to the major city of Goma, where aid could easily be distributed,” says Dr Guyguy Manangama, head of emergency programmes for MSF. “Relief activities are being developed here and there, but without any coordination or overview of the situation in the camps. The scale of mobilization of the aid system is far from sufficient and far too slow. There is also a blatant lack of visibility and information on the aid provided and on the number of people in need of support – information which is nonetheless necessary for the proper coordination of aid organizations.”  

Many of the displaced people arrived in the camps after experiencing serious episodes of violence. MSF’s retrospective mortality survey in Rusayo, Shabindu and Don Bosco camps showed that violence was the main cause of death among men (up to 40 per cent in some camps), with two deaths per 10,000 people per day,  between January and the end of April, which was mostly experienced in their place of origin or on their journey to the Goma area. This is twice the emergency threshold of one death per 10,000 people per day.

“The scale and duration of displacement is historic, even for Eastern DRC”, says Dr Manangama “This gives us an idea of the response that is needed. Yet hundreds of thousands of people continue to be largely neglected by the aid community, despite the growing awareness of the humanitarian system.”

During the first months of the crisis in 2022, the humanitarian response, including that of MSF, was too slow to get underway, the organization acknowledges. Since then, MSF has continued to implement interventions to support the population. Today, it has mobilized a further €1 million ($1.68 million CAD) to provide ready-to-use therapeutic food to the most vulnerable families, especially those with children under the age of five suffering from acute malnutrition.

The humanitarian situation is also desperate in other areas of North-Kivu, such as the Lubero, Masisi and Rutshuru territories, where MSF is sometimes the only organization on site, and where the level of aid available to people in need is also seriously inadequate.  

About MSF’s emergency response

MSF teams have been working in 12 camps for displaced people around the city of Goma, providing free medical care, supplying drinking water and building latrines and showers according to the most urgent needs. MSF teams have also responded to the cholera and measles epidemics that have affected some camps by treating patients and organizing vaccination campaigns. MSF teams are also providing medical care in other citiesof the North Kivu province, as well as in Minova and Numbi in the South Kivu province, where tens of thousands of displaced people have also taken refuge. In North Kivu, MSF continues to provide free essential medical care in the health zones of Rutshuru, Kibirizi, Bambo, Binza, Mweso, Masisi and Walikale.


[1] https://dtm.iom.int/reports/rdc-nord-kivu-evaluation-rapide-de-crise-m23-mai-2023