MSF survey shows continued cycle of violence against displaced women in eastern DR Congo

More than one in 10 young women reported being raped in displacement camps in and around Goma.

A displaced Congolese woman in a makeshift camp near Goma, DRC.

DR Congo 2024 © Moses Sawasawa

NEW YORK/KINSHASA, AUGUST 6, 2024 — Alarming rates of violence, particularly sexual violence, in and around displacement camps near North Kivu’s capital in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) remain high, according to a new survey carried out by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières’ (MSF) epidemiological and medical research arm, Epicentre.

Conducted in April 2024 among households of displaced people living in four camps—housing more than 200,000 people—to the west of Goma, the capital of North Kivu Province, this survey is a follow-up to one that Epicentre released in 2023. This year’s findings show that the overall frequency of physical, psychological, and sexual violence is still high in this area. For example, more than one in 10 young women reported being raped between November 2023 and April 2024, with this number as high as 17 percent in some camps.

A displaced Congolese woman beside her tent in a camp.
“Hundreds of thousands of displaced people have lost their usual means of subsistence," says Erica Simons, an epidemiologist at Epicentre. "They no longer have access to the fields they used to cultivate and are dependent on irregular and inadequate food aid, while they continue to suffer daily violence linked to the ongoing conflict." DR Congo 2024 © Moses Sawasawa

Since 2022, more than a million people have fled conflict in North Kivu between the Congolese army (FARDC) and the M23 armed group, involving various local and regional armed forces. Two years on, hundreds of thousands of people are still living in extremely precarious conditions near Goma—many in overcrowded displacement camps surrounded by front lines and exposed to high levels of violence.

“Living conditions in displacement camps remain extremely precarious,” said Erica Simons, an epidemiologist at Epicentre. “By fleeing the conflict in North Kivu, hundreds of thousands of displaced people have lost their usual means of subsistence. They no longer have access to the fields they used to cultivate and are dependent on irregular and inadequate food aid, while they continue to suffer daily violence linked to the ongoing conflict.”

Victims and survivors of sexual violence report being attacked by men, often armed, in the forests and fields where they have to go to collect firewood or the food they need to feed their families ... Their precarious situation, and that of their makeshift shelters, make them particularly vulnerable to this type of violence.

Camille Niel, MSF emergency coordinator in Goma

In response to people’s needs, MSF teams are present in most of the camps in and around Goma, providing general health care, health promotion, treatment for malnutrition, and care for victims and survivors of sexual violence. Every day, MSF teams witness the acute vulnerability of women, children, and adolescents as the camps are dangerous and the socioeconomic insecurity of displaced people is increasing—forcing them to make decisions that could leave them more vulnerable to attacks.

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“Once again this year, victims and survivors of sexual violence report being attacked by men, often armed, in the forests and fields where they have to go to collect firewood or the food they need to feed their families,” said Camille Niel, MSF’s emergency coordinator in Goma. “They also report numerous incidents of violence committed on a daily basis inside the camps. Their precarious situation, and that of their makeshift shelters, make them particularly vulnerable to this type of violence.”

Authorities and aid agencies must guarantee the protection of displaced people and respond adequately to the epidemic of violence. To protect women and children in particular, MSF also calls again on aid agencies to step up food assistance, access to income-generating activities, and safe shelters in the camps, as well as do more to support accommodation and shelter for victims and survivors of sexual violence in serious danger of being attacked again.