![Villagers are fleeing their homes in the DRC. [File Photo]](http://www.un.org/News/dh/photos/2009/20-03-2009drc.jpg) Villagers are fleeing their homes in the DRC. [File Photo] Clashes between two tribes in northern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have caused more than 16,000 civilians to flee their homes since last week, crossing into neighbouring Republic of Congo to find safety, the United Nations refugee agency reported today.
Fighting first erupted in March between the Enyele and Munzaya tribes, whose dispute is over farming and fishing rights in the village of Dongo, in DRC"s Equateur province.
In that first round of clashes, over 200 houses were burned and more than 1,200 residents fled to Republic of Congo, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
This time some 60 people were killed and about 40 seriously injured, and the deadly clashes spread to surrounding villages, several of which were burned.
"UNHCR is seriously concerned about the intensity of the violence and its spread to nearby villages, which have been virtually emptied of people," said spokesperson Andrej Mahecic.
The agency said the 16,100 asylum-seekers from DRC, who are mainly Munzayas, are staying in public buildings or with host communities across 11 villages alongside the Oubangui River, which they had to cross to reach the Republic of Congo.
According to a team from UNHCR that visited the group, they are in need of proper shelter, food and household items such as blankets, kitchen sets and jerry cans.
"Once a thorough assessment is made, we will work together with the Government to help them," Mr. Mahecic told reporters in Geneva. "Some also need medical care, but an over-stretched mobile clinic run by a UNHCR partner cannot cope with all their needs."
Before the current influx, there were already some 9,000 refugees in northern Republic of Congo who had sought safety from the civil war in the DRC.
Mr. Mahecic noted that although large numbers went home to the DRC after the war formally ended in 2003, these 9,000 preferred to settle permanently in the Republic of Congo, and UNHCR is working with the Government to find ways to make this possible.
Source: UN News
Global 
-
-
-
The Security Council today agreed to extend the United Nations panel of experts monitoring compliance with sanctions related to the conflict in Somalia for another year and to expand its mandate to try to maintain the arms embargo imposed in the region. more
-
Lives can be saved and the destruction of property minimized when natural disasters strike if governments invest adequate resources in disaster risk reduction measures, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said today. more
-
Even the world?s most homogeneous country faces the challenge of constructively managing diversity, the United Nations Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide said today, calling on States to recognize the need to end discrimination and inequalities between different ethnic, racial and ... more
-
U.S. President Barack Obama has renewed his administration's offer of dialogue and diplomacy with Tehran. more
-
The progress made over the past decade in lifting the world?s most vulnerable nations out of poverty has been undermined since the global recession began, according to a senior United Nations official, who urged rich countries not to renege on their commitments to support the poorest of the poor. more
-
The United Nations is celebrating French language today as part of a new initiative to raise awareness and respect for the history, culture and achievements of each of the six official languages of the world body. more
-
United Nations experts have recommended that two pesticides be added to a trade "watch list" under a UN-backed treaty aimed at helping poorer countries more effectively manage potentially harmful imported substances. more
Comments
|
|