DR Congo: MSF Vaccination Used As Bait In Unacceptable Attack On Civilians

Last month, seven vaccination sites operated by the international medical /Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) came under fire during attacks by the against the Forces Démocratiques de Libération du Rwanda () in , (DRC). Thousands of civilians had gathered at the sites. MSF denounces this clearly unacceptable abuse of humanitarian aid for .

MSF launched a campaign in Masisi district to support the Congolese ministry of health in its response to a measles epidemic. On October 17, MSF were vaccinating thousands of children in seven different sites in Ngomashi and Kimua Zones, controlled at the time by the .

All parties to the conflict had given to MSF to vaccinate at these locations at those times. However, the Congolese launched attacks on each of the vaccination sites. All the people who had come to get their children vaccinated were forced to flee the heavy fighting. Scattering everywhere, they are now in unknown locations and thus cannot be vaccinated. MSF had to stop its activities in the zones and evacuate its teams to Goma, the of .

“We feel we were used as bait,” said Luis , head of MSF programs in Central Africa. “The attacks coincided with the beginning of our vaccination and put the lives of civilians in extreme risk. Thousands of people, and the , were trapped in the gunfire. The attack was an unacceptable abuse of to fulfil . How will MSF be perceived by the population now? Will our patients still feel safe enough to access medical care? We are compelled to strongly denounce this situation as such actions seriously compromise our neutrality.”

MSF is an independent medical, that delivers impartial medical aid according to the strictest principles of neutrality. It is this neutrality that makes it possible for to vaccinate in such -controlled zones, which, until that point, had been inaccessible to Ministry of Health staff.

In addition, the last few months have seen a worrying increase in attacks against humanitarian organisations by various armed groups in North and South Kivu.

“MSF demands that all parties to a conflict respect the work of humanitarian organisations,” added Meinie Nicolai, MSF director of operations. “If not, it is the populations who pay the price. Those already overwhelmed by extreme violence and endless displacement are the ones who may end up cut off from humanitarian assistance.”

Source
/Médecins Sans Frontières

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