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Congo Crisis: More Help is Needed for Women and Girls in North Kivu as Sexual Violence Escalates
25 Nov 2008 20:03:00 GMT
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Goma, North Kivu - Women and girls in eastern Congo's North Kivu province are once again suffering increasing levels of sexual violence amid renewed conflict, instability and widespread displacement of civilians.

An International Rescue Committee team conducted a three-day assessment of conditions in Kibati Camp, north of Goma, where roughly 55,000 people have settled. The team found that women and girls are being raped both in and around the camp.

"Women and girls are forced to leave the camp in search of additional firewood, food, and income for their families and these daily chores expose them to sexual violence," says Sarah Spencer, who oversees IRC programs for rape survivors in eastern Congo.

Two women told the IRC team that they had gone to search for potatoes in fields near the frontline when they were attacked and raped. "Our men will be killed or recruited if they leave the camp," another woman told the IRC. "What choice do we have?"

Spencer says that rape is also occurring while women are sleeping in camps where they have taken refuge.

Rape has been used as a weapon of war throughout eastern Congo for years. Based on IRC's experience in the region, women and girls are at much greater risk of violence and exploitation during times of heightened military conflict, displacement and in unstable and unprotected settings.

Kibati Camp is extremely congested and shelter for most is only a plastic tarpaulin. Many of the displaced women and children are now separated from trusted family and neighbors, and are living next to strangers in the camp. The absence of protective walls and traditional support from their communities increases the threat of violence and exploitation. After attacks occur, women have very limited access to medical and psychological services.

IRC experts are working with key partners in displaced settlements north of Goma to help survivors gain access to essential health and psychological care and address safety concerns for women and girls. IRC is also distributing firewood to families in camps so that women and girls don't have to leave settlements to search for it.

But Spencer says the international community is only scratching the surface of what's needed to aid rape survivors in North Kivu. She says much more needs to be done now and in the long-term to expand services and improve the safety and well-being of women and girls in the region.

"The health and psychological needs of rape survivors in Congo will continue long after the fighting stops," says Spencer. "Addressing their needs must become a priority for the international community."

Contact Emily Meehan (Goma) +243 998 795415, emily.meehan@theIRC.org Gina Bramucci (Kinshasa) +243 813 679604, gina.bramucci@theIRC.org Melissa Winkler (New York) + 1 646 734 0305, +1 212 551 0972, melissa.winkler@theIRC.org

About the International Rescue Committee The IRC has been working in the Democratic Republic of Congo for 12 years and maintains one of the largest humanitarian aid programs in the country, assisting more than 3.6 million people. Since 2002, the IRC has aided more than 40,000 survivors of sexual violence in eastern Congo and remains committed to meeting the needs of women and girls there. The IRC currently works in 42 countries, providing help and hope for refugees and others uprooted by violent conflict and oppression. For more information, visit www.theIRC.org/congocrisis.

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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