- Alan Doss
- cholera
- Congress
- Dar es Salaam
- Democratic Republic of Congo
- DRC
- far east
- food rations
- Goma
- humanitarian law
- Kiwanja
- Laurent Nkunda
- New York
- North Kivu
- PARECO/Mayi Mayi militia
- Person Career
- Person Political
- Person Professional
- Pierrette Vu Thi
- Quotation
- Rwanda
- Tanzania
- Uganda
- UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
- UN World Food Programme
- United Nations
- United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
- United Nations International Children ' s Emergency Fund
- world body's peacekeeping mission
New York - The United Nations is rushing relief to civilians affected by the violence engulfing the far east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
According to the world body's peacekeeping mission, fighting continues intermittently in the vast African nation.
The mission, known by its French acronym MONUC, has restricted the movement of UN personnel due to the hostilities in North Kivu province, where clashes have recently escalated between Government forces (FARDC) and the Congress in Defence of the People (CNDP), a militia led by former general Laurent Nkunda.
The fighting has displaced more than 250 000 people, on top of the existing 800 000 forced from their homes by previous hostilities.
According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), 15,000 Congolese have been registered in neighbouring Uganda.
Internally displaced persons (IDPs) continue to gather at UN facilities, with another 600 people reported to have arrived on Monday.
The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said that 29 tons of emergency aid supplies - including one million water purification tablets and sheets - to help 100 000 people displaced in the past 10 days arrived yesterday in Goma, North Kivu's capital.
"These supplies will contain the spread of cholera and diarrhoea, both extremely contagious diseases on the rise in nearly all internally displaced person settlements in North Kivu," said Pierrette Vu Thi, the agency's DRC Representative.
The UN World Food Programme (WFP) reports that nearly two dozen trucks carrying supplies are crossing into Goma from nearby Uganda and Rwanda on a daily basis. Food is also reaching the provincial capital by barge from Bukavu, South Kivu, and from Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on trucks.
On Monday the agency expected to finish delivering 10-day food rations for 135 000 people in six camps around Goma.
Distribution to one of these settlements in Kibati was thwarted last Friday by fighting, but has since resumed and delivery of supplies to feed 65 000 people and materials to build shelter for over 300 families is expected to be completed on Monday.
Insecurity, including pillaging of homes and harassment, has also forced aid groups in South Lubero, almost 200 kilometres north of Goma, to withdraw.
Meanwhile, the weekend's clashes around Rutshuru, also situated north of Goma and near the borders with Rwanda and Uganda, prevented the return of some 5 000 families living in spontaneous settlements in the nearby town of Kiwanja, the site of fighting last week between CNDP and pro-Government PARECO/Mayi Mayi militia.
A MONUC team investigating last week's violence in Kiwanja received credible reports of the deaths of a large number of civilians, but noted that exact figures cannot be established.
The mission, which visited 11 burial sites that witnesses claim hold bodies of combatants and civilians, also heard reports that civilians were targeted with reprisal attacks after Mayi Mayi forces abandoned the town to the CNDP.
Alan Doss, the Secretary-General's Special Representative and head of MONUC, characterized the aggression in Kiwanja as "serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian law."
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported that five medical centres in Rutshuru require urgent restocking.
Water and sanitation is a priority concern in the area, with no toilets or washing facilities available to IDPs.
One cholera death and four new cases of the disease were reported over the weekend. - BuaNews

