In
close conjunction with the Red Cross Society of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the ICRC has organized a distribution of emergency supplies for over 1,300 families (about 6,500 people) who have
been driven from their homes in North Kivu into the Kalehe area of neighbouring South Kivu, some 40 km north of Bukavu.
The operation should last from 8 to 12 November.
The
armed clashes that have been continuing in North Kivu for over two months are having disastrous consequences.
Many thousands of people have sought refuge between Minova and Nyabibwe in
South Kivu.
Their displacement means leaving vital resources behind and arriving largely empty-handed in a place of refuge, so both the displaced people and the local communities now
hosting them have been living in increasingly difficult conditions.
"To help the families meet urgent needs, we're providing them with basic items, including clothing, blankets, mats, soap,
hoes, buckets and kitchen sets," explained Patrick Walder, head of the ICRC sub-delegation in Bukavu.
The ICRC is sending supplies to the medical facilities to enable them to deal with the
influx of displaced people.
The hospital in Minova regularly receives ICRC supplies, while Kalehe hospital and the health-care centre in Nyabibwe receive various items when required.
Each facility has been sent a special kit for the treatment of war-wounded people and essential medicines for the care of rape victims.
The ICRC remains extremely concerned about
the depredations being committed against the civilian population by bearers of weapons: rape, pillage, summary executions and forced recruitment of minors.
It reminds all parties to the
armed conflict of their obligation under international humanitarian law to respect the life and health of civilians, the wounded and persons captured in connection with the conflict.
They
also have a responsibility to facilitate both access by humanitarian organizations to people in need and the activities of those organizations once in place.
For further
information, please contact:
Wolde-Gabriel Saugeron, ICRC Kinshasa, tel.