Congo DRC

War Zones in DRC Congo

2008 04 28 : North Kivu Province : Rebels Attack Camps, Halting Aid Flow

Rebels Attack Camps, Halting Aid Flow - Renewed fighting between DR Congo government army and Rwandan extremist rebels - the FDLR - has forced the UN refugee agency to suspend aid moving into camps in the North Kivu province, it reported Friday. [AA Network - DRC Congo]

2008 04 30 - Congo DRC Conflict Update

Democratic Republic of Congo's five-year war officially ended in 2003, but the country is still regularly listed as the site of one of the world's worst humanitarian crises. Despite having their first elected president in over 40 years and living in a country which should be rich from its gold, diamonds and minerals, millions of Congo's people still suffer from a lethal combination of disease and hunger caused by ongoing conflict and displacement.

= 3.9 million dead since 1998 from war-related violence, hunger and disease
= Congo is the size of western Europe
= 40,000 women and girls have been raped

The country formerly known as Zaire now has a democratic government - led by President Joseph Kabila, a former guerrilla - but insecurity continues in the remote, resource-rich provinces near the eastern border. The world's largest peacekeeping mission - a U.N. force of 17,000 soldiers and police - struggles to prevent violence and protect the population of almost 60 million.

About 5.4 million people in this vast country have died from war-related hunger and disease since 1998, according to aid agency International Rescue Committee, which calculated in 2007 that as many as 45,000 people were dying every month.

"There are few places on earth where the gap between humanitarian needs and available resources is as large - or as lethal - as in Congo," said Jan Egeland, when he was U.N. under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs.