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Reuters
Reuters
Health
By Sonia Rolley

Hundreds of sex crime victims treated in Congo displacement camps, MSF says

More than 670 women, or 48 new victims per day, have been treated for sexual violence in displacement camps in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo in the last two weeks, medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said on Tuesday.

About 600,000 people are sheltering in the camps near Goma, the capital of North Kivu province, after fleeing rebel conflict in their home towns in the surrounding region.

Most of the victims reported being assaulted when they left the camps to get food or wood, MSF said.

In three sites - Rusayo, Bulengo and Kanyaruchinya - more than half the victims said they were assaulted by armed men, MSF said, without giving further details.

"For months, our teams have been treating a high number of cases but it has never reached the catastrophic scale of recent weeks," Jason Rizzo, MSF emergency coordinator in North Kivu province, said.

"Our data only reflects people who arrive at our facilities so it's probably underestimated," he told Reuters.

A staff member from another humanitarian organisation, speaking on condition of anonymity, said concerns had been raised with the Congolese authorities about alleged rapes being committed by members of the military and allied proxy groups, and about reports of displaced people being prostituted in brothels run by army officers and local authorities.

Lieutenant General Constant Ndima, military governor of North Kivu province, said he could "not rule out" that members of the military had committed sex crimes.

"The victims speak of armed men. As you know, armed groups are currently scattered around Goma," he told Reuters, adding that investigations were under way.

"Let's wait for the conclusion of the experts' work," said Colonel Guillaume Ndjike, army spokesperson for North Kivu province, when asked to comment on the allegations.

North Kivu and neighbouring Ituri province have been governed by the military for the last two years since Congo declared a state of siege to address worsening violence.

Rape has been widely documented as a weapon of war used by armed groups in eastern Congo, where dozens of militias are active. Conflict has simmered and periodically flared up since the end of two regional wars between 1996 and 2003.

Most of the recent displacement in North Kivu province has been caused by fighting between the Congolese army and the M23, an ethnic Tutsi-led rebel group.

(Additional reporting by Ange Kasongo; Writing by Nellie Peyton; Editing by Alison Williams)

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