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FROM THE FIELD

Half of families torn apart by war in the Congo
25 Nov 2008 00:45:29 GMT
Source: Save the Children - Australia
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The survey showed 63per cent of displaced people in the camps and

shelters around Goma in eastern DRC had lost contact with one or more close relatives as they fled the fighting. Over a quarter – 26 per cent - of those surveyed had lost a child, and 17 per cent had lost their husband or wife.

If these results are replicated across the Congo’s conflict zone it suggests a huge problem for families already traumatised by war.

Hussein Mursal, who heads the Save the Children operation in Democratic Republic of Congo, said: “We surveyed 284 people in Kibati camp, churches, schools and clinics around Goma, so this is only a straw poll.

“But we believe it is clearly indicative of a wider problem in eastern DRC. The people in the Congo have endured terrible physical conditions and this survey gives a glimpse of the emotional turmoil most of them are enduring too.

“Families have been torn apart by war. Many of those we surveyed have no idea if their children, spouses and other close relatives are alive or dead.”

 

 


[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]


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[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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Last updated:Tue Nov 25 00:45:43 2008