Inset: DR Congo's President Joseph Kabila. FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
The EU said on Sunday it
was “extremely concerned” about DR Congo after the country announced it
would decline a $1.7 billion international aid package.
A
war of words broke out between the United Nations and DR Congo after
Kinshasa said on Friday it would not attend a donor conference in Geneva
aimed at tackling a humanitarian crisis the Congolese government says
has been vastly exaggerated by aid workers.
“The EU is
extremely concerned about the worsening crisis in the DRC,” EU
commissioner for humanitarian aid Christos Stylianides said at a press
conference in the eastern city of Goma.
“The
humanitarian situation is getting worse day by day and unfortunately I
saw enormous suffering, enormous humanitarian needs and the situation in
the country is not business as usual.”
Aid bodies
DR
Congo’s Prime Minister Jose Makila on Friday said the UN had
overreacted and that aid bodies and NGOs in the country were propagating
a “bad image of the Democratic Republic of Congo throughout the world”.
“The Democratic Republic of Congo declines to participate in the Geneva conference” on April 13, he said.
The United Nations has declared the humanitarian crisis in the DR Congo to be a Level 3, the UN’s highest-level emergency.
Mr
Stylianides, who met victims of violence by armed groups and militias
in Bukavu and Goma, said he spoke with officials from the troubled
cities.
“I of course raised the issue about civilians
but also some administrative obstacles,” he said, adding he also spoke
about humanitarian access.
Risked dying
Mr
Stylianides is scheduled to meet with officials including the foreign
minister in the capital on Monday and said he would “try to persuade
them of the need” to attend the Geneva conference, which is co-organised
by the EU and UN.
At least 13.1 million Congolese are
in need of humanitarian aid, including 7.7 million who are severely food
insecure, the UN Security Council said Thursday in a unanimous
statement.
The UN children’s agency had sounded the
alarm at the end of last year saying 400,000 children risked dying in
the central diamond-rich Kasai region, which has been ravaged by
conflict.
At least 3,000 people have died and about 1.4 million have been displaced.
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