Humanitarian situation in Congo getting worse, EU says

Congolese national police officers arrive at a port on Lake Kivu

Congolese national police officers arrive at a port on Lake Kivu, Goma

President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Joseph Kabila
President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Joseph Kabila.

The humanitarian situation in Democratic Republic of Congo is getting worse by the day, the European Union’s top aid official said.

Multiple crises are spiralling out of control in Congo – in the central Kasai region and in the eastern Kivu and
Ituri provinces – aggravated by President Joseph Kabila’s refusal to step down at the end of his elected
mandate in 2016.

The UN said over 13 million Congolese need humanitarian aid, twice as many as last year, and 7.7 million face severe food insecurity, up 30 per cent from a year ago.

It has declared the crisis to be at Level 3, the world body’s highest-level emergency.

“We all believe that the humanitarian situation is getting worse day by day. It’s not business as usual,” said Christos Stylianides, European Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management.

He spoke to Reuters during a trip to eastern Congo.

Concern over the deterioration of the situation in Congo, a country with a long history of war and humanitarian
crises, has pushed the UN, the EU and donor nations to organise a conference in Geneva in April.

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They are seeking to raise 1.7 billion dollars, nearly four times the amount secured in 2017, to support humanitarian activities in Congo.

Congo on Thursday disputed the UN assessment of the gravity of the crisis, which it said would discourage investment at a time when the government was attempting to stabilise the volatile economy.

“Activating the highest level of humanitarian emergency based on facts that are not real constitutes a hindrance
to development,” the government said in a statement on Thursday.

It added that, unless the humanitarian statistics were brought in line with the government’s own figures, it would not send representatives to the conference in Geneva.

Stylianides, who was touring Congo’s hard-hit North Kivu province on Sunday, was due to travel to the capital
Kinshasa later in the day to attempt to convince the foreign and humanitarian affairs ministers to reverse the decision.

“We will try to persuade them that this is not good for DRC but above all for the vulnerable people in

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