UNICEF, WFP Call for Child Protection, Aid Access in Eastern DRC

WFP
Photo by WFP/Michael Castofas. A mother with her children displaced by violence wait to register with SCOPE to receive the first assistance. She has lived in the Rusayo camp, close to Goma since November 2023.

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KINSHASA - The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the World Food Programme (WFP) are calling for immediate action to protect children and families caught in the escalating violence in Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) where an increasing number of people, including children, have been wounded or killed near makeshift camps. Both agencies call on all parties to the conflict to prioritize the protection of civilians and allow humanitarian agencies to do their work.

The latest conflict in the Eastern DRC has resulted in catastrophic conditions for the local population. Fierce fighting has, over the past two weeks, moved 25 kilometres' west of Goma towards the town of Sake, where children and their families are caught in a deadly crossfire.

"Children in DRC need peace now," said Grant Leaity, UNICEF Representative in the DRC. "We are calling for children to be protected in this war and for an end to this violence through renewed efforts to find a diplomatic solution. We are extremely concerned about the safety of children and their families in and around camps in Goma."

The fighting has triggered a massive influx of people into already overcrowded camps. An additional 130,000 people have joined 530,000 internally displaced persons in areas around Goma. Separately, another 140,000 people have moved towards Minova in South Kivu.

Crucial land routes to facilitate food delivery and other supplies have been cut off, causing shortages and price spikes in Goma's local markets. The situation further strains families struggling to put food on their tables.

"We are facing a humanitarian catastrophe of massive proportions," said Peter Musoko, Country Director and Representative for WFP in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). "Make no mistake: If we do not act now, lives will be lost."

The increase in violence and displacement is straining resources for both agencies to mount a comprehensive response that includes food, clean water, good sanitation, safe shelter, basic health care, and protective services for women and children.

WFP is appealing for $300 million for the next 6 months. With an urgent resource break starting in March, the agency needs $78 million immediately to plug this gap and continue its operations.

For the next 6 months, UNICEF seeks $400 million for its emergency response in eastern DRC. Urgent priorities following this recent influx of people include deploying mobile clinics to provide emergency medical care and nutrition services in and around camps, reinforcing cholera containment and prevention, distributing non-food items, increasing water trucking, caring for unaccompanied children and reuniting them with their families, and providing services to prevent and respond to cases of gender-based violence.

DRC has become one of the continent's most significant internal displacement crises, with 6.9 million people displaced, primarily due to conflict in the east. In the last year alone, IOM estimates that 1.6 million people have been displaced.

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