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Congolese refugees from DRC crossing into Kisoro District in South-West
Uganda
© UNHCR/R. Russo, October 2008 |
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Press release
2008-12-02
DRC: Camp transfer continues despite precarious security situation
UNHCR is continuing today the voluntary transfer of displaced Congolese
civilians from the precarious Kibati camps on the northern outskirts of
Goma, the provincial capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s
(DRC) volatile North Kivu province. They are being relocated to four existing
camps just west of Goma. Our efforts had to be suspended on Sunday afternoon
due to shooting, which also continued through the night. Altogether, four
internally displaced persons (IDPs) were wounded and taken to a local hospital.
Work is proceeding at the new Mugunga III camp, where the bulk of the
Kibati population will be relocated. Meanwhile, we have also identified
additional accommodation possibilities at the existing camps of Mugunga
I and II, Buhimba and Bulengo, where all services are already running and
we have been able to relocate the handicapped, sick, infants, pregnant
women, elderly and other vulnerable displaced people since Friday.
Some 65,000 Congolese civilians sheltered in the two Kibati camps are
in a precarious situation as the warring parties remain in close proximity.
We fear that the civilian population could be caught in the crossfire should
the fighting resume in this area.
Today’s voluntary transfer is scheduled to take some 140 vulnerable
families (close to 500 people) from the Kibati I camp to the Mugunga I
camp. By the time of Sunday’s suspension, we and our partners
had already assisted more than 140 families to relocate to Mugunga I. Subsequent
transfers will target displaced families currently sheltered in school
blocks and portable tent warehouses which UNHCR has made available at Kibati.
Most of the IDPs will make the 15-kilometre journey from Kibati camps
to the new Mugunga III on foot. Work on some 15 communal shelters (hangars)
and other camp infrastructure continues in Mugunga III.
Five truckloads of aid items from UNHCR’s regional emergency stockpile
in Ngara, Tanzania, arrived in Goma over the weekend, delivering 30,000
blankets, 15,000 sleeping mats and 4,160 kitchen sets.
Meanwhile, reports from local partners in Kanyabayonga, some 150 kms north
of Goma, say that some 40,000 displaced people have managed to return to
their homes. This is about 80 percent of the estimated number of people
displaced there over the past weeks. Many of the returning families are
arriving to looted and destroyed homes.
Some 3,000 IDPs are reported at Luofo village, some 20 kms north-west
Kanyabayonga.
Reports suggest that fighting further up north around Ishasha has abated
after the visit there of the UN Special Envoy, former Nigerian President
Oluseguna Obasanjo. Fighting around Ishasha, a town on the DRC-Uganda border,
began on 22 November, forcing at least 13,000 Congolese to seek refuge
in Uganda during the past week alone. The flow has now stopped.
Fighting in North Kivu intensified at the end of 2006. By January 2008,
it had brought the total number of IDPs in the region to more than 800,000.
Since fighting resumed in August, some 250,000 civilians have fled, many
of them previously displaced. |
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