DRC: Thousands risk violence and malaria in Katanga

As tensions increase between government forces and Mai-Mai militias in the Katanga province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) calls on all parties to avoid harming civilians who have fled in their thousands into the surrounding bush.

The exact extent of the displacement is hard to quantify, but most of the villages along the 115 km road from Shamwana to Dubie are empty, as are villages along the 70 km stretch between Shamwana and Mpiana.

Civilians at risk

“Civilians risk being caught up in the fighting and mistaken for combatants,“ said Christine Slagt, MSF’s Project Coordinator in Shamwana. “Some militia groups are preventing people from leaving the area.”

The medical humanitarian organisation removed non-essential staff from its project in Shamwana (about 300 km from provincial capital Lubumbashi) this week, leaving a skilled core team with surgical capacity able to respond to an expected increase in war-wounded.

The medical consequences of displacement are severe with many patients now unable to return to health facilities to continue essential medical treatment. The majority of children in MSF nutritional programmes have now defaulted, as have most patients receiving anti-retroviral treatment for HIV/AIDS.

A measles vaccination campaign in September was interrupted when people fled due to fighting in Kiambi leaving thousands of children susceptible to an outbreak of the disease.

Surge in malaria

To make matters worse, the region is experiencing a peak in malaria due to the rainy season. Since October, MSF has been treating on average nearly 1,000 patients per week for the disease, the bulk being children under five-years-of-age.

“We’re particularly concerned about the very vulnerable hiding in the bush who cannot access medical care” said Christine Slagt. “Severe malaria can be fatal in children if left untreated and pregnant women with complications during labour are in a life-threatening predicament”.

The area dubbed the “Triangle of Death” in the past has a violent history. In 2005, violent clashes between Mai-Mai rebels and the military in Katanga resulted in a traumatised population.

People witnessed or experienced violence and rape, had family members killed, fled because of fighting and saw their homes and possessions go up in flame. Since then, there has been relative calm in the region but this appears to have ended.

MSF in Katanga, DRC

MSF has been running a referral hospital in the town of Shamwana since May, 2006, providing people living in the Kiambi, Mitwaba and Kilwa health zones with free healthcare. Medical teams treat malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS and malnutrition and provide reproductive health services, mental health care and emergency surgery.

Skilled MSF surgeons have repaired internal injuries sustained during childbirth in hundreds of women for five consecutive years in Shamwana. The current level of displacement has prevented MSF from organising such specialist surgery in recent months.



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