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In photos: WFP urges action as conflict pushes displacement and hunger in east DRC

‘There is not a minute to lose’ says World Food Programme’s Country Director
, WFP Staff
Man pushes wheelchair laden with belongings
Residents of the Kanyaruchinya camp near Goma flee on Sunday - fighting has overwhelmed the capital of North Kivu province. WFP/Moses Sawasawa 

The World Food Programme (WFP) is joining calls for the international community to act as a surge in fighting – including heavy artillery fire – displaces hundreds of thousands of people in camps in the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. By Monday (27 January), the escalation of violence had overwhelmed Goma, the largest city in the east. 

 A displaced woman carries her child through rubble-strewn streets, belongings wrapped in cloth, as families flee conflict in eastern DR Congo
People trek long distances with little access to clean water to find safety amid the sound of gunshots and artillery fire. WFP/Moses Sawasawa

“Goma falling is the worst thing that we could possibly imagine happening in North Kivu,” said WFP Country Director for DRC, Peter Musoko. “It means we have an urban city centre with a lot of very frustrated and vulnerable people all looking for assistance. We face the gigantic task of determining who is the most vulnerable.”

WFP is monitoring the situation to deliver aid where possible. For now, “safety is paramount,” said Musoko. The aim is to reach 800,000 people in North Kivu, South Kivu, and Ituri – 5.1 million people were already displaced across the three eastern states before the current crisis.

A man rides a heavily loaded motorbike through a crowded street, carrying mattresses and belongings, as others follow
More than 5 million people were already displaced across the eastern states of North Kivu, South Kivu, and Ituri. WFP/Moses Sawasawa

A woman with her belongings strapped to her back and a baby to her front walks down a road as a motorcycle passes
Women and children bear the brunt of such crises - DRC has an appalling record of gender-based violence. WFP/Moses Sawasawa

People are trekking long distances with all the belongings they can carry in the hope of reaching shelter with relatives, often in cramped conditions. They need bedding, medical supplies, food and clean water – while women and girls are particularly at risk in a country where rape is widespread. 

Before the recent escalation, nearly a quarter of the country’s 25.6 million people were already in ‘crisis’ and ‘emergency’ levels of food security, according to the Integrated Food Phase Classification. Over the next five months, 4.5 million children aged under 5, and 3.7 million pregnant and breastfeeding women are expected to face acute malnutrition.

A woman at a WFP distribution sight looks at the camera holding a yellow jerrycan over her head and a big USAID tin
A WFP food distribution at a camp for displaced people near Goma in December. WFP/Barbara Pereira Mendes

An evacuating woman in a red headscarf carries a bucket as a motorcycle laden with belongings passes by
Many people have been forced to flee multiple times in recent years. WFP aims to reach 800,000 in Eastern DRC with critical aid. WFP/Moses Sawasawa

Evacuating people on the side of the road waiting with three lambs in the foreground
People cling on to precious livestock as they leave Goma. WFP/Moses Sawasawa

When Musoko left Goma on Friday, WFP was still delivering assistance. “Around midday, we had to call everyone back into the office – the situation started looking completely unpredictable,” he said.

“What we need right now is urgent financing – even before we get back on the ground – so we can move quickly to reel back this spiralling crisis. We have to fuel hope with action.”

That requires donors to step up. Failing to means “we would not only see immense suffering in the eastern parts of DRC, but also outflows across the region and even the continent.”

Displaced adults and children walk along the side of a road carrying belongings
WFP is calling for US$410 million to assist people through to June in east DRC. WFP/Moses Sawasawa

A tired looking man on a motorcycle laden with a double mattress rides by, followed by others
With the fall of Goma people face a worst-case scenario in humanitarian terms. WFP/Moses Sawasawa

He added: “DRC is forgotten. People find it very complicated. But too many people have died. Too many people are suffering. This is an unnecessary conflict, causing unnecessary suffering. We need  the international community to come together and say ‘enough.’”

WFP needs US$410 million to continue its operations across DRC through to June. This will bolster assistance to 1.5 million people per month in parts of the east where needs are highest, supporting nutrition clinics, school feeding programmes, and projects supporting female farmers and small businesses.

“There is not a minute to lose,” said Musoko. 

 Read more about WFP's work in DRC

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