Tag Archives: caritas Goma

From child soldier to top student in Congo

Eight year old Germain Muhindo, third from left, sits with two other ex child soldiers at the Caritas centre. Photo Taylor Toeka

Eight year old Germain Muhindo, third from left, sits with two other ex child soldiers at the Caritas centre. Photo Taylor Toeka

By Taylor Toeka, Caritas Goma

Francais

Germain Muhindo comes top of his class almost always, yet a few months ago the eight year old first grader had never even seen a chalkboard. But he had seen war. He was forced into being a child soldier for three months in September 2012 by fighters in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s ravaged east.

“We were working to the fields when we met the rebels,” said Germain. “They ordered my older brother, who is thirteen, to carry their bags. He refused so they hit him and made him do it. As there were only two of us, they made me come along too.”

Half a million people were driven from their homes in North Kivu last year and thousands of children were taken to be used as soldiers, cooks, messengers, porters or the girls as sex slaves by government and rebel forces.

“Every day I thought of my mother,” he said. “I didn’t know how to feed myself. I was very ill.”
Germain was released from his captors to Caritas Goma and is now one of the 32 boys and 6 girls at a centre for former child soldiers run by Caritas in Kanyabayonga. Caritas provides the children with medical and care and counselling, safe place, helps them restart their schooling or gives those beyond school age the skills to find work.

“After reunification with their families, we get them back into school,” said Leontine Munganga, head of Caritas centre. Germaine is special as he is so young and had never been to school before. The Caritas staff are enormously proud of his achievement in doing so well.

It’s takes the children about three months before they can return home. Germain is staying longer because his village is unsafe.

The process is slow as Caritas must prepare the child and the community they are returning to accept them back. Tackling discrimination against the children for the crimes they were forced to commit is important.

The Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Involvement of Children in armed conflict forbade the recruitment of children by either governments or rebels. Until now the Congolese army and militias are on a ‘list of shame’ for their use of children in armed conflict.

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Caritas aid gets through to Congo camps

Marceline Dusabimana, 36, a mother of six children, waits in turn to receive oil, maize flour, beans and salt.from caritas. Credit: Taylor Toeka/Caritas Goma

By Taylor Toeka Kakala , Caritas Goma

The sun begins to break as a long line of tired women and anxious men forms in front of the Caritas Goma food distribution point.

In the middle of the line, Marceline Dusabimana, 36, a mother of six children, waits in turn to receive oil, maize flour, beans and salt.

As most of the beneficiaries present, Marceline fled the fighting between the Congolese army and rebels of the M23 that started six months ago.

“I have witnessed war for the past 15 years. I moved from one camp to another. We are completely dependent on humanitarian aid, because we lack the means to buy food,” she said.

Caritas has started the distribution of food from the World Food Programme (WFP) for 9,983 displaced families in Mugunga camp. These initial distributions consist of a three-day ration.

Conflict in North Kivu has exacerbated an already dire humanitarian situation and uprooted more than 750,000 people from their region of origin. Among them, 250,000 newly displaced people have fled the fighting between the regular army and the M23.

“I watched my husband die in Kibumba before I took flight with my kids to the Kanyaruchinya camp”, she said.

The situation in Goma is now at the centre of attention. It has always been a catalyst for many issues and a place for rural populations seeking safety from the danger of the hills.

However, the presence of so many people forced from their homes contributes to environmental degradation and worsening health conditions as overcrowding increases the proliferation of disease.

Caritas Goma is the local diocesan Caritas, part of the national member Caritas Congo. Caritas has launched an appeal for more than US $2.6 million to assist the most vulnerable as well as provide protection for 60’000 people displaced by the conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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Goma diary

This morning Caritas Goma Director Fr. Oswald Musoni gave us his reflections on the situation following the fall of the city to M23 rebels on 20 November.

“The bombs and bullets were terrifying.  I’m finally feeling better after three days and am back and at work,” he said. “Yesterday it was difficult to get around, but this morning the shops are open and the city has come back to life. The Caritas team headed out into the field trying to collect information on the number of people affected by the crisis. The situation is very fluid so we’re still being cautious.” Continue reading

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Congolese rebels take Goma as people flee

Caritas Goma has been providing food and other aid to relief camps. Operations are on stand by for the moment. Credit. Caritas Goma.

“There is still crackling fire this morning,” says Caritas Goma Head of Emergencies Eddy Yamwenziyo. “But it’s very sporadic and is just shooting in the air.”

Congolese ‘M23’ rebels entered Goma this morning according to Radio Okapi. Goma is a city of about a million people in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo on the border with Rwanda.

“There is no electricity,” says Taylor Kakala, Caritas Goma’s Communication officer, speaking to us as the batteries run down on his cell phone. “I do not know how long my cell phone will last and when I can recharge it.” Continue reading

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Peacebuilding in Eastern Congo

En français:E x-combattants

A former militia member who is now working as a trader thanks to support from his community and Caritas Goma. Credit: Caritas Goma]

The situation in the eastern Congo province of North Kivu continues to deteriorate since conflict resumed in March after hundreds of former rebels defected from the army to join a renegade general.
Keeping ex-rebels from returning to the bush is difficult. Poverty, lack of opportunities and lack of acceptance within their communities for their past lives, can lead the former fighters to pick up the gun once more.

Caritas Goma is the diocesan Caritas operating in the area. Part of its peacebuilding programme aims to give the ex-combatants a future . Caritas works with the local villagers and the former fighters to create employment opportunities for the latter and improve relations between the two groups.

Caritas organises the former fighters into groups of three plus one member of the community. Together they build small community projects. They also receive specialist training. The jobs range from motorcycle taxis to farming, working in mills to hairdressing, plumbing to catering and so on. Some have a wider impact, such as reforestation work which improves the environment.

The work improves the living conditions of the former soldiers and their families as well as bringing them a greater stability. By involving locals, the programmes has helped create greater harmony. Jules was once a rebel fighter who is now a trader. “I no longer use a weapon to terrorise the people,” he said.

Some 260 ex-combatants and 110 members of their host communities were involved in the UNDP funded programme between September 2010 and march 2011 in Rutshuru and Masisi.

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Caritas food aid gets though in eastern Congo

First food aid in weeks arrives in Minova in eastern Congo as Caritas manages to reach people affected by ongoing conflict. Photo by Taylor Toeka/Caritas Goma

Despite fighting in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s North Kivu between the government army and rebels, Caritas has been able to get food aid through to people in desperate need.

Caritas Goma, the local diocesan arm of Caritas Congo, has provided food in Minova, Kalungu, Ntamugenga and Kitshanga to 37,000 people forced from their homes. No international relief had reached these areas since the outbreak of a two-month-old revolt in eastern Congo by the rebels who call themselves M23.

The aid delivery began at the weekend in Minova with the support of CAFOD (Caritas England and Wales), Trócaire (Caritas Ireland), Secours Catholique (Caritas France) and Caritas Belgium. Caritas is trying to reach first pregnant women, new mothers and children under five with beans, maize flour, vegetable oil and salt to help supplement their diet.

The latest fighting has forced more than 100,000 people from their homes. The spark for the current fighting appears to have been government moves to arrest an ex-militia leader, Bosco Ntaganda, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes.

The conflict risks undermining a shaky peace in eastern Congo since accords were signed in 2009 between the government and several rebel forces. Church leaders in eastern Congo say that without international attention the region could once again see full blown war. The Bishops of the Episcopal Provincial Assembly of Bukavu (ASSEPB) said in a statement 31 May that unless the underlying causes are addressed – poverty, lack of security, policing and security, the unresolved status of refugees from the 1994 Rwandan genocide – then the region will always be unstable.

Caritas has launched an international emergency appeal to help people forced from their homes by the conflict in North Kivu. The emergency programme will help over 10,000 families with food and other aid.

En français
Nord-Kivu : le Réseau Caritas au chevet de nouveaux déplacés de guerre Continue reading

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Thousands flee as horror returns to Congo

Delphine escaped with her four children from Mushaki to a relief camp in Gomaas renewed violences sweeps though eastern Congo. Photo by Taylor Kakala/Caritas Goma

“They come haggard, exhausted and desperate,” said Taylor Kakala, communications officer for Caritas Goma. “These men, women and children fled in panic, leaving with nothing.”

They’re coming from the Masisi region in North Kivu, a troubled part of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to the safer towns of Sake and Goma. They’ve fled under machine gun fire, forced to run as rockets and mortars fell on their homes.

“We were caught between automatic gunfire and heavy weapons of the government and the rebel fighters. We had to stay low to the ground in order to reach safety,” said Delphine, who escaped with her four children from Mushaki. They walked for 10 days and 40 km to reach Goma.

Jerome is a community leader in the Mugunga relief camp. He said they had to take flight without warning. “The fighting began suddenly,” he said. “People were working in the fields. Children were at school. Some were at home.” He says the journey on the Sake road was perilous. Two children were killed in a traffic accident. Three women gave birth during the exodus. One gave birth to still-born twins.

Civilians are the victims of renewed fighting between the government troops and rebels that began late April. Continue reading

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