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Displaced Congolese return to camps near Goma

News Stories, 15 November 2007

© UNHCR/M.Yonekawa
Internally displaced Congolese on the road in North Kivu. Thousands have returned to camps in the Mugunga area.

GOMA, Democratic Republic of the Congo, November 15 (UNHCR) Thousands of Congolese have been flowing back to the camps for internally displaced people (IDPs) that they had fled from earlier this week in Democratic Republic of the Congo's North Kivu province.

By Thursday morning, some 20,000 people had returned to Mugunga I and Mugunga II camps, located 15 kilometres west of the North Kivu capital of Goma. The figure accounts for about 80 percent of those who fled the two sites early Tuesday after dawn skirmishes in surrounding hills between government forces and suspected renegade troops.

The fighting died down later Tuesday and people soon started returning to their homes in the IDP camps. At least 28,000 IDPs out of some 38,000 sheltered at the Mugunga I, Mugunga II and Lac Vert sites had fled.

"Tuesday's events, when tens of thousands of Congolese fled within hours, show the extreme volatility of North Kivu. There is a high risk of civilians becoming victims of violence and severe human rights abuses," said UNHCR Senior Emergency Preparedness & Response Officer Germaine Bationo.

The IDPs at the Mugunga camps returned to widespread scenes of looting, with their shelters stripped of the UNHCR-distributed plastic sheeting used to protect them from the rain and sun. Some seem to have been manipulated by profiteers into selling their food and non-food items. "IDPs are now coming to us to ask what they will do without plastic sheeting," said Bationo.

The UN refugee agency handed out 7,000 pieces of precious plastic sheeting in the two Mugunga camps earlier this month, but on Thursday it had all gone, UNHCR field officers said. The aid item has a good resale value and on Thursday morning market traders in Goma were selling plastic sheeting at US$12 apiece UNHCR spends $7.00 per piece of plastic sheeting.

UN aid workers believe much of the looting was organized and systematic. Meanwhile, those returning to the camps have no protection from the torrential rain pounding the region and they also lack sufficient food.

UN agencies and non-governmental organizations working in Goma are now planning new assistance to the IDPs, some of whom had been displaced as many as five times before fleeing to the Mugunga area earlier this year.

As calm returned to the area, UNHCR on Wednesday resumed the transfer of displaced people from Lac Vert to Buhimba an IDP site established by UNHCR near Goma in early October. The operation had been launched on November 7 as part of a strategy to improve the living conditions of IDPs in the area.

Also on Wednesday, the government launched information campaigns on local radio urging IDPs to return to the camps. They promised transport for IDPs who were too tired to walk back to their temporary homes in the Mugunga area. UNHCR staff toured Bulengo and Buhimba camps with loudhailers urging IDPs to return.

Local authorities positioned open trucks along the road linking Goma and Mugunga to transport IDPs back to the camps. Other IDPs made their own way back to the sites using footpaths.

The build-up of military forces and repeated clashes in North Kivu since December 2006 have led to the worst internal displacement in the area since the end of the civil war in 2003. Some 375,000 Congolese have been forced to leave their homes in the province since last December, including more than 160,000 in the last two months alone. There are some 800,000 IDPs in the province.

UNHCR is urging all parties to refrain from attacks on internally displaced people and civilians, and to find a negotiated solution for the prolonged violence that continues to plague North Kivu and its population.

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Return to Swat Valley

Thousands of displaced Pakistanis board buses and trucks to return home, but many remain in camps for fear of being displaced again.

Thousands of families displaced by violence in north-west Pakistan's Swat Valley and surrounding areas are returning home under a government-sponsored repatriation programme. Most cited positive reports about the security situation in their home areas as well as the unbearable heat in the camps as key factors behind their decision to return. At the same time, many people are not yet ready to go back home. They worry about their safety and the lack of access to basic services and food back in Swat. Others, whose homes were destroyed during the conflict, are worried about finding accommodation. UNHCR continues to monitor people's willingness to return home while advocating for returns to take place in safety and dignity. The UN refugee agency will provide support for the transport of vulnerable people wishing to return, and continue to distribute relief items to the displaced while assessing the emergency shelter needs of returnees. More than 2 million people have been displaced since early May in north-west Pakistan. Some 260,000 found shelter in camps, but the vast majority have been staying with host families or in rented homes or school buildings.

Return to Swat Valley

UNHCR/Partners Bring Aid to North Kivu

As a massive food distribution gets underway in six UNHCR-run camps for tens of thousands of internally displaced Congolese in North Kivu, the UN refugee agency continues to hand out desperately needed shelter and household items.

A four-truck UNHCR convoy carrying 33 tonnes of various aid items, including plastic sheeting, blankets, kitchen sets and jerry cans crossed Wednesday from Rwanda into Goma, the capital of the conflict-hit province in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The aid, from regional emergency stockpiles in Tanzania, was scheduled for immediate distribution. The supplies arrived in Goma as the World Food Programme (WFP), with assistance from UNHCR, began distributing food to some 135,000 displaced people in the six camps run by the refugee agency near Goma.

More than 250,000 people have been displaced since the fighting resumed in August in North Kivu. Estimates are that there are now more than 1.3 million displaced people in this province alone.

Posted on 6 November 2008

UNHCR/Partners Bring Aid to North Kivu

UNHCR/Partners Bring Aid to North Kivu

Since 2006, renewed conflict and general insecurity in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo's North Kivu province has forced some 400,000 people to flee their homes – the country's worst displacement crisis since the formal end of the civil war in 2003. In total, there are now some 800,000 people displaced in the province, including those uprooted by previous conflicts.

Hope for the future was raised in January 2008 when the DRC government and rival armed factions signed a peace accord. But the situation remains tense in North Kivu and tens of thousands of people still need help. UNHCR has opened sites for internally displaced people (IDPs) and distributed assistance such as blankets, plastic sheets, soap, jerry cans, firewood and other items to the four camps in the region. Relief items have also been delivered to some of the makeshift sites that have sprung up.

UNHCR staff have been engaged in protection monitoring to identify human rights abuses and other problems faced by IDPs and other populations at risk across North Kivu.

UNHCR's ninemillion campaign aims to provide a healthy and safe learning environment for nine million refugee children by 2010.

Posted on 28 May 2008

UNHCR/Partners Bring Aid to North Kivu

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