“This is the latest in a series of brutal attacks in Ituri. Plaine Savo is populated by families – vulnerable families – who have fled similar violence with their children and are seeking only the right to live in peace,” said Caitlin Brady, Director for the Norwegian Refugee Council in DRC. “There has never been and never will be any justification for attacks on civilians. Those responsible for must be held to account.”
Initial reports indicate that as many as 59 civilians were killed and a further 40 injured. The Headmaster of a Norwegian Refugee Council supported school in the area reported that two of his students were among the dead. The assailants used guns and machetes to attack the occupants of the camp. The injured were taken to a local health facility for treatment.
Plaine Savo camp is home to more than 24,000 people who fled violence in Djugu territory in 2019. They have once again been forced to flee and have sought refuge at the UN Peacekeeping mission base (MONUSCO).
There has been a steep escalation of deliberate and targeted attacks by armed groups against displaced people in Ituri. On top of the most recent attack, around 68 people have been killed in attacks on five different camps in the same area since November 2021. These attacks have triggered new waves of mass displacement and plunged already vulnerable populations into a climate of terror.
“We urge the Congolese authorities to immediately redouble efforts to provide protection of civilians and take concrete steps to address the drivers of conflict in the east of the country,” said Ms. Brady.
Note to editors:
- There are currently 1.7 million displaced people in Ituri province, DRC.
- At least 1,200 civilians were killed in Ituri province in 2021.
- NRC has been supporting displaced people in Plaine Savo camp with shelter, water and sanitation activities, with funding from Sida and ECHO.
- This area – Djugu – has been classified as level 4, Emergency, by the Integrated Phase Classification (IPC) process; 60% of the population of Djugu Territory are living at phase 3 or 4. 4 is the level below famine. Just under 3 million are classified as acutely food insecure in Ituri.
For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact:
- NRC global media hotline: media@nrc.no, +47 905 62329
- Tom Peyre-Costa, Regional Media Adviser in West and Central Africa: tom.peyrecosta@nrc.no, Whatsapp +33658518391