Photo: Siegfried Modola/IRIN. Fleeing earlier fighting in the east
Source: IRIN
KINSHASA/NAIROBI, 20 November 2012 (IRIN) - The arrival of M23 rebels in
the eastern Congolese city of Goma on 20 November, has triggered
widespread concern over the humanitarian ramifications in a region
already beset by armed conflict, widespread displacement and attacks on
civilians.
Fighting
around the city led to the cancellation of a humanitarian assessment
mission in North Kivu Province – of which Goma is the capital –
scheduled for 19 November.
Rebel spokesman Vianney Kazarama broadcast a message to the city telling
residents to carry on with their normal activities, saying M23
was there for their security. He provided his own phone number and that
of two intelligence officers for citizens to call if they had any
concerns.
Kazarama also called on government soldiers and police to assemble at a stadium on 21 November for an identification process.
Goma resident, Jean Baptiste Musabyimana, told IRIN that M23 appeared to
be in control of Goma. “We can see the M23 patrolling the main road
that runs through our neighborhood,” he said.
Another resident, Florentin Baruti, told IRIN that in the Bwirere
district, where fighting took place on 20 November, most people were
still indoors but that some young men were in the streets to see what
was happening.
“It’s a relief that the fighting ended quite quickly,” said Baruti, “but
we’re worried about the possibility of a counter attack by the FARDC
[government forces].”
One of the main concerns of humanitarian agencies in the region relates
to the 60,000 residents of the Kanyarucinya camp for internally
displaced persons (IDPs) to the north of Goma shortly before M23 reached
the outskirts of the town. The camp is one of five dotted around Goma,
which have a combined population of around 95,000.
“One problem is that many displaced families were split up on Monday [19
November] as they tried to get away from the fighting,” said Tarik
Riebl, Oxfam’s coordinator in Goma. “When we talk to people they say
they don’t know where some of their family members are.”
He added: “For the moment food is one of the main needs, and another is
non-food items, such as water containers and other household items, and
shelter. There needs to be a distribution of these items."
Displaced children at risk
The Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) and the Norwegian
Refugee Council (NRC) warned that displaced children now “face an
increased risk of rape, abuse and recruitment.”
“What we are seeing now is that fighting between the rebel group and the
army is displacing the displaced again, stretching the coping abilities
of an already exhausted community,” Sebastian Albuja, the head of
IDMC’s Africa department, said in a statement.
“Internally displaced children and specifically boys in North Kivu are
at particular risk of being recruited by a variety of armed groups,”
said Olivia Kalis, Policy and Advocacy Advisor for the NRC country
office.
"IDPs are locking up or hiding their children fearing attack and forced
recruitment with girls and boys will be taken by armed actors,” she
said.
Another NGO, World Vision, expressed similar concerns, putting the number of at-risk children in Goma alone at 200,000.
“Spontaneous camps for displaced families have been forming around Goma
as communities flee to safety. Through its partners, World Vision is
receiving reports that in the confusion, children are getting separated
from parents – and the implications of this are devastating,” the agency
said.
“We know from the recent practices of the groups involved in this latest
fighting that unaccompanied children in this part of DRC are in
immediate and real danger of forcible recruitment into armed groups,”
said World Vision’s Dominic Keyzer, from the Rwandan border town of
Gisenye.
Keyzer added that the violence had impeded humanitarian response and
that World Vision has had to suspend some life-saving programmes in
eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
Widening insecurity
The International Crisis Group (ICG) said the government’s “capitulation
to the M23 could send shockwaves throughout the Kivus and relaunch open
warfare between the DRC and Rwanda” – which has been accused of backing
the rebel movement, a charge it denies.
The ICG also warned that the fall of Goma might lead to the settling of
scores “or even targeted extrajudicial executions against authorities
and civil society activists who have taken a stance against the M23
since the beginning of the crisis".
The neighbouring province of South Kivu “is also affected by the
deteriorating security situation which threatens thousands of civilians
and has led to the suspension or reduction of humanitarian activities in
the area", according to the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
“South Kivu has been severely affected by repeated clashes between
various armed groups and between armed groups and the Congolese army
since mid-October. Several villages have been attacked over the last few
weeks, triggering the flight of more than 30,000 people, while more
than 300 houses have been destroyed or burned in these attacks. The
current violence, primarily in the Kalehe and Shabunda territories, has
reportedly killed more than 160 people in the past 10 days and led to
serious human rights violations. Inter-communal tensions have compounded
the situation,” OCHA said.
There are more than 1.6 million IDPs in the two Kivu provinces.