In just two weeks, more than 670 survivors of sexual violence have been treated by Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams in camps for displaced people around Goma, the provincial capital of North Kivu, representing 48 new survivors per day. These shocking figures reflect the extreme vulnerability and risk of violence faced by displaced people in the area. Nearly 60% of the victims were attacked less than 72 hours before coming to MSF clinics, illustrating the urgency of the situation.
Clashes between the Congolese army, the M23, and the many armed groups in North Kivu have led more than a million people to flee their homes since March 2022. Over 600,000 have found refuge in camps on the outskirts of the city of Goma, where conditions are often overcrowded and unsanitary.
From 17 to 30 April 2023, MSF teams treated 674 survivors of sexual violence in Bulengo, Lushagala, Kanyaruchinya, Eloime, Munigi and Rusayo, including 360 in Rusayo alone, one of the newest and most densely populated camps located west of Goma. These figures are probably fewer than the true number of people affected by sexual violence as they only take into account the consultations carried out by MSF teams in the camps where the organisation is present.
"Each day, an average of 48 new survivors of sexual violence are being treated by our teams in the camps for displaced people," says Jason Rizzo, MSF emergency coordinator in North Kivu. "For months, our teams have been treating a high number of cases, but never before on the catastrophic scale of recent weeks. Nearly 60% of victims present within 72 hours of their attack, showing it is an ongoing medical and humanitarian emergency.”
Almost all the victims treated by MSF are women and the majority recount being attacked while searching for food or firewood outside of the displacement camps. In Rusayo, Bulengo and Kanyaruchinya, more than half of the victims also reported being attacked by armed men.
"After we arrived here, one of my children started to show signs of malnutrition. I couldn't stand by and do nothing. I decided to go to the forest to collect wood to sell so I could buy food. That's when I came across bandits who attacked me," says a displaced woman living in Rusayo camp.
Despite various humanitarian and relief organisations increasing activities in recent weeks, the living conditions in camps around Goma remain disastrous and the people living there experience a lack of the most basic necessities such as food, latrines, water and shelter. The critical shortage of humanitarian assistance increases the vulnerability of displaced people and exacerbates the risk of violence they may be subject to.
"It is urgent to improve people’s living conditions in the camps. Basic needs, such as access to food, water and sanitation, must be guaranteed. Protection measures must be provided to keep women, in particular, out of harm's way," says Rizzo.
MSF provides free and confidential medical and psychological care to all victims of sexual violence in the main camps for displaced people around Goma. In order to avoid medical complications related to sexual assault, it is essential that victims present themselves to a health facility within 72 hours of the attack to receive appropriate medical care.