Close sites icon close
Search form

Search for the country site.

Country profile

Country website

UNHCR shocked by abuse of Congolese civilians as fighting persists

Stories

UNHCR shocked by abuse of Congolese civilians as fighting persists

The UN refugee agency is urging all parties to the conflict in eastern DRC to prevent indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks against civilians.
27 July 2012 Also available in:
Displaced people in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo are often subject to indiscriminate attacks as fighting continues between government and rebel troops.

GENEVA, July 27 (UNHCR) - The UN refugee agency has condemned rampant abuses against civilians in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo amid fighting that has uprooted nearly half a million people in four months.

The conflict that intensified between government troops and armed rebel groups in June is believed to have displaced more than 470,000 people in eastern DRC. This includes some 220,000 in North Kivu, 200,000 in South Kivu and more than 51,000 who fled to neighbouring Uganda (31,600) and Rwanda (19,400).

The massive displacement is fuelled by atrocities committed on the ground, said UNHCR spokesman Andrej Mahecic in Geneva on Friday.

"Our staff and partners in Uganda, Rwanda and eastern DRC have been receiving regular and extensive reports of widespread human rights violations and abuses," he said. "These include indiscriminate and summary killings of civilians, rape and other sexual abuse, torture, arbitrary arrests, assaults, looting, extortion of food and money, destruction of property, forced labour, forced military recruitment, including children, and ethnically-motivated violence."

As the fighting rages on, large areas of North Kivu province are left without an adequate security presence. In the Masisi and Walikale territories, several armed groups have taken advantage of the power vacuum to attack villages and IDP settlements, destroying and looting houses, killing people belonging to ethnic groups seen as hostile, and subjecting the entire communities to extortion.

From April to July 15, aid agencies recorded more than 7,000 protection incidents in the North Kivu territories of Masisi, Walikale, Rutshuru and Beni. There may be more cases that go unreported as victims - mostly villagers and internally displaced people (IDPs) - are unable, too scared or ashamed to speak out, especially in rape cases.

Forced recruitment is also widespread. Earlier this month, for example, an armed group in Rutshuru forced 145 people to transport their ammunition. Some IDPs were beaten and injured for refusing to join another armed group.

Civilians fleeing into Uganda told similar stories. In the first two weeks of July - when there was heightened military activity across the border - an unusually high number of young men aged 14 to 20 years arrived at the Nyakabande transit centre in Uganda. Some told our staff they were fleeing a recruitment campaign. Many said they saw young men and minors being forced to join the rebels to carry ammunition. Two boys were found with wounds on their shoulders from carrying heavy weapons. There were also reports that armed men were blocking the escape routes for many of those fleeing to Uganda. Two people who left the transit centre to pick up their families in the DRC were arrested in the border town of Bunagana.

In Rwanda, recent arrivals reported looting and verbal and physical harassment of people speaking Kinyarwanda particularly in Masisi territory, but also in Rutshuru and Kalehe.

Mahecic expressed concern that the fighting in eastern DRC is conducted without any respect for the safety of civilians and in clear violation of international humanitarian and human rights principles. "UNHCR urges parties to the conflict to avoid targeting the civilian population and populated areas," he said. "We call on all parties to the conflict to take all steps to protect the civilian population and to prevent indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks."

The deteriorating security situation in eastern DRC is severely affecting UNHCR's capacity to deliver assistance outside the established IDP camps north and west of North Kivu's capital Goma. In the camps and settlements of Uganda and Rwanda, the refugee agency and its partners provide shelter, protection, medical and psycho-social counseling for victims of violence.

By Andrej Mahecic