Today's date:
 |
 |
 |
 |
On the Road: A group of IDPs flee to escape fighting between the Congolese
army and rebel troops in North Kivu province. © UNHCR/M.Yonekawa |
 |
 |
 |
Press release
Wednesday, 29 October 2008
Some 30,000 Congolese flee to IDP settlement in North Kivu
UNHCR staff in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), are struggling
to prepare for the arrival of an estimated 30,000 displaced people forced
to flee camps and villages to the north of city amid fighting between rebel
and government forces.
Amid tight security, a UNHCR team was on its way yesterday morning to
Kibati camp, about 10 kms north of Goma, to prepare for the possible 30,000
new arrivals. Two sites for internally displaced people at Kibati already
hold some 15,000 IDPs.
The tens of thousands of people believed fleeing southwards include some
20,000 previously displaced people from Kibumba camp, 30 kms north of Goma,
and an estimated 10,000 from surrounding villages. Many more could be on
the way from areas further north that have been affected by the fighting
in recent days.
Fighting was also reported close to Rutshuru, 100 kms north of Goma and
the location of another UNHCR office.
In Goma itself, UNHCR staff describe the situation in the town as tense
following demonstrations by frightened local residents yesterday which
reportedly left five people dead.
Fighting in North Kivu intensified at the end of 2006. By January 2008,
it had brought the total of internally displaced people in the region to
more than 800,000 people. There are 16 UNHCR-assisted sites in North Kivu
sheltering some 100,000 people. Tens of thousands of civilians have found
shelter in more than 40 makeshift sites across the province. Aid agencies
estimate the total number of IDPs in the province as close to 1 million.
|
 |
|