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Humanitarian catastrophe looms in east Congo as rebels push south, official says

Humanitarian catastrophe looms in east Congo as rebels push south, official says

Reuters13-02-2025

Summary
M23 advance could trigger humanitarian catastrophe
U.S. foreign aid works hits aid work in Congo
Goma airport still shut, affects operations
Feb 13 (Reuters) - The advance of Rwanda-backed M23 rebels into Democratic Republic of Congo's South Kivu province threatens to trigger a humanitarian catastrophe in an area already housing thousands of displaced people, the provincial governor said.
The Tutsi-led rebels have been inching south since they seized eastern Congo's largest city of Goma at the end of last month, gaining more ground despite mediation efforts.
About 3,000 people were killed in days of violence that preceded the capture of Goma, the capital of North Kivu province, according to United Nations figures.
Hospitals were overwhelmed with casualties and humanitarian operations in the city were hindered as non-essential aid workers had to be evacuated and warehouses were looted.
Provincial governor Jean-Jacques Purusi Sadiki told Reuters in an interview that there had since been an influx of people fleeing Goma into South Kivu "creating huge humanitarian needs that we are trying to face". The region was severely under-resourced, he said.
Traffic was suspended between South and North Kivu, creating shortages of goods, he said.
"Our fear is that should M23 advance to this side, it will assist to a natural humanitarian catastrophe," he said, speaking in South Kivu's capital Bukavu.
AID-DEPENDENT
The escalation of the decade-old insurgency in east Congo has stoked fears of a broader regional war.
Congo's vast mineral reserves, which are concentrated in the east, also play into conflict. Congo is the world's top producer of tantalum and cobalt, a key component in batteries for electric vehicles and mobile phones. It is also the third global copper producer and home to significant coltan, lithium, tin, tungsten, tantalum and gold deposits.
Despite this, Congo is gthe world's most aid-dependent country.
Humanitarian operations last year were 70% funded by Washington, has taken a big hit since U.S. President Donald Trump imposed a pause on foreign aid last month.
The top U.N. aid official in Congo, Bruno Lemarquis, said several partners had already had to pause their projects.
"Finding alternatives will be extremely challenging," Lemarquis said in an interview in Congo's capital Kinshasa.
The fall of Goma's airport makes it difficult to evacuate severely injured patients and bring in supplies, he said.
"Now that the situation has stabilized and security in the city has improved, we need to bring back staff, which isn't something that can happen overnight," he said.
Goma's airport is still shut due to operational concerns and because of airspace management, which is under Congolese authority, Lemarquis said.
The fall of Goma and the M23's advance since is the latest in a series of Tutsi-led rebellions that emerged in Congo's east after the official end of a string of conflicts between 1996 and 2003 that sucked in Congo's neighbours and killed millions of people.
Rwanda has been accused by Congo, the United Nations and several Western countries of supporting the rebels with thousands of its own troops and weapons. It denies this and says it is acting in self-defence.
A ceasefire declared by the rebels for humanitarian reasons at the start of February rapidly crumbled.
Congo's government said on Wednesday its troops had been attacked several times in different areas since a joint summit of Eastern and Southern African blocs took place to defuse the crisis last week.

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