Kinshasa / Geneva (ICRC) – More than
100,000 people are estimated to have fled their homes since armed clashes resumed between Congolese government troops and the armed opposition in North and South Kivu provinces on 28 August
last.
Many violations of international humanitarian law, including looting and rape, have been committed by weapon bearers against civilians.
The International Committee of
the Red Cross (ICRC) reminds all parties to the conflict that it is absolutely essential to respect the life and dignity of persons not, or no longer, directly taking part in hostilities.
"We have been witnessing a major deterioration in the humanitarian situation in the Kivus since the resumption of hostilities," said Max Hadorn, head of the ICRC delegation in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo.
"Thousands of people have been displaced, often several times, and they urgently require aid.
It is vital that humanitarian organizations have access to
the areas most affected." The vast majority of people afflicted by violence are in places that are difficult for humanitarian workers to reach because of poor security.
The ICRC, working
with the Red Cross Society of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, nevertheless succeeded in assessing the most pressing needs of part of the displaced population in North and South Kivu.
The organization found that many families had to flee their homes without being able to take anything at all with them, and that they were in urgent need of medical care and safe drinking water.
The ICRC therefore provided 17 health-care facilities with medicines and medical supplies for treating the wounded.
A surgeon and a nurse were also made available to reinforce
surgical and other hospital services in North Kivu.
In addition, drinking water for 10,000 people was delivered to the province.
Over the coming days, priority will be given to
obtaining access to the areas hardest hit while maintaining the food distributions for 40,000 people already under way.
The ICRC reminds all parties to the conflict that they are obliged by
international humanitarian law to preserve the lives and health of the civilian population and of people wounded or captured during the fighting.
The parties must authorize and facilitate
the safe and rapid passage of relief consignments being sent to the civilian population.
The red cross emblem, staff carrying out relief operations and any material or equipment being used
for those operations must be respected and protected in all circumstances.
Photo gallery on Democratic Republic of the Congo available on demand For further information, please
contact:
Olga Miltcheva, ICRC Goma, tel: +243 81 03 66 812
Pierre-Emmanuel Ducruet, ICRC Kinshasa, tel: +243 81 700 85 36
Anna Schaaf, ICRC Geneva, tel: +41 22 730 22 71 or +41 79 217
32 17
Ethiopian women refuge-seekers sleep on a roadside near the southern Yemeni village of al-Khabar after they arrived on a smuggling boat from Somalia September 29, 2008. At least 52 Somalis died ...