Tag: Democratic Republic of Congo

  • Liberia issues alert on monkeypox outbreak

    Liberian health authorities issued an alert on the possible outbreak of monkeypox, an infectious disease which is found mostly in central and western Africa.

    Liberia’s chief medical officer Francis Kateh said the disease, caused by the monkeypox virus, has already been discovered in the southern county of River Cess.

    Kateh said there are currently four confirmed cases of the disease. A couple of suspected cases have also been sent for testing.

    According to the health official, the time from exposure to the onset of symptoms of monkeypox is around 10 days, while the duration of symptoms is typically from two to five weeks.

    He said the virus may be spread from handling bushmeat, an animal bite or scratch, body fluids, contaminated objects or close contact with an infected person.

    Read AlsoMonkeypox victim loses pregnancy

    The monkeypox was first identified in 1958, amongst laboratory monkeys.

    The first human cases were discovered in 1970 in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Fever, itchy toes, headache, muscle pain, and swollen lymph nodes, among others, have been identified as the symptoms of the disease.

    The disease is not deadly and can be cured through the smallpox vaccine.

    In 2017, west African country Nigeria recorded 172 suspected and 61 confirmed cases of the monkeypox disease between September and December.

    NAN

  • Congo crisis worsening – EU

    The humanitarian situation in Democratic Republic of Congo is getting worse by the day, the European Union’s top aid official said, as .

    Multiple crises are spiralling out of control in Congo – in the central Kasai region and in the eastern Kivu and Ituri provinces – aggravated by President Joseph Kabila’s refusal to step down at the end of his elected mandate in 2016.

    The UN said over 13 million Congolese need humanitarian aid, twice as many as last year, and 7.7 million face severe food insecurity, up 30 per cent from a year ago.

    It has declared the crisis to be at Level 3, the world body’s highest-level emergency.

    “We all believe that the humanitarian situation is getting worse day by day. It’s not business as usual,” said Christos Stylianides, European Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management.

    He spoke to Reuters during a trip to eastern Congo.

    Concern over the deterioration of the situation in Congo, a country with a long history of war and humanitarian crises, has pushed the UN, the EU and donor nations to organise a conference in Geneva in April.

    They are seeking to raise 1.7 billion dollars, nearly four times the amount secured in 2017, to support humanitarian activities in Congo.

    Congo on Thursday disputed the UN assessment of the gravity of the crisis, which it said would discourage investment at a time when the government was attempting to stabilise the volatile economy.

    “Activating the highest level of humanitarian emergency based on facts that are not real constitutes a hindrance to development,” the government said in a statement on Thursday.

    It added that, unless the humanitarian statistics were brought in line with the government’s own figures, it would not send representatives to the conference in Geneva.

    Stylianides, who was touring Congo’s hard-hit North Kivu province on Sunday, was due to travel to the capital Kinshasa later in the day to attempt to convince the foreign and humanitarian affairs ministers to reverse the decision.

    “We will try to persuade them that this is not good for DRC but above all for the vulnerable people in DRC,” he said.

    NAN

  • Pope decries murder of women, children at service for Africa

    Pope decries murder of women, children at service for Africa

    Pope Francis on Thursday denounced the murder of innocent women and children as the “horrid face” of war as he presided at a special prayer service for peace in South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Francis had planned to go later this year to South Sudan, which has been hit by civil war, famine and a refugee crisis, but had to scrap the project for security reasons.

    During the service, which was punctuated by African singing in English, French, Italian and Swahili, Francis asked God to “break down the walls of hostility that today divide brothers and sisters, especially in South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo.”

    “May he protect children, who suffer from conflicts in which they have no part, but which rob them of their childhood and at times of life itself,” he said in his brief homily.

    Read Also: The Mugabes in our midst

    “How hypocritical it is to deny the mass murder of women and children! Here war shows its most horrid face,” he said.

    St. Peter’s Basilica was decked out with photographs of African children.

    South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011 after protracted bloodshed, then fell into civil war in late 2013, with troops loyal to President Salva Kiir fighting those backing Riek Machar, a former vice president Kiir had sacked.

    Both sides have targeted civilians, human rights groups say.

    “Right now, we are moving into the lean season, and by July of 2018, many thousands of people across South Sudan – not just isolated pockets of the country – will be dying from hunger,” said Jerry Farrell, country representative in South Sudan for Catholic Relief Services.

    “What is most tragic is there absolutely shouldn’t be hunger in South Sudan,” he said in an email.

    He added that people of different tribes inter-marry and work together but that the conflict is instigated and fanned by politicians.

    In the Democratic Republic of Congo, dozens of people have died in protests against President Joseph Kabila’s refusal to step down at the end of his constitutional mandate in December 2016.

    Unrest sparked by the uncertainty surrounding the polls has raised fears Congo could witness a repeat of the kind of violence that killed millions around the turn of the last century, mostly from hunger and disease.

  • 28% of people living with HIV in W/A not on drugs – UNAIDS

    28% of people living with HIV in W/A not on drugs – UNAIDS

    The Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS ( UNAIDS ) on Wednesday said only 28 per cent of people living with HIV in West and Central Africa have access to anti-retro-viral drugs.

    Dr Djibrill Diallo, the Regional Director, UNAIDS, made this known at the regional media workshop organised by the agency in Dakar, Senegal.

    The theme of the workshop is: “Informing the Messengers to Change the Face of the Fight against HIV in West and Central Africa’’.

    According to Diallo, of the 6.5 million people live with HIV in the region, only 28 per cent of them have access to anti-retro-viral drugs.

    “Eastern and Southern Africa have a little above 54 per cent access to anti-retro-viral drugs,’’ he said.

    The regional director said that UNAIDS has designed Catch-Up Plan for West and Central Africa with the aim of fast-tracking HIV/AIDS response in the region.

    Diallo said that the catch-up plan was an essential step toward the realisation of 90-90-90 UNAIDS target by 2020 and ending AIDS as a public health challenge by 2030.

    He said that 90-90-90 target means 90 per cent of the population would know their status, 90 per cent of people found to be living with HIV got enroll into treatment by 2020.

    The regional director said the last 90 refers to the 90 per cent of the people living with HIV, who were enrolled on treatment suppressed the virus in their body by 2030.

    Diallo said that the catch-up plan was an 18-month initiative aimed at enhancing HIV response in the region to the speed of those countries already on track of achieving the 90-90-90 target.

    He said that the plan aims to put additional 1.2 million people living with HIV on treatment by the end of 2018.

    According to him, the plan was adopted by the Head of States at the 29th African Union Summit in June 2017.

    “In Nigeria, because of the emergency catch-up plan, additional 100,000 people were put on treatment in the country.

    “As UNAIDS, we will work with the countries to do a strategy that will address the first wave countries in the region,’’ the regional director said.

    He said that the plan would initially be implemented in eight first wave countries in West and Central Africa which were divided into three categories.

    Diallo said that the four countries that bear the brunt of HIV infections are Nigeria, Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    The regional director said that three countries, whose health systems were wiped-off due to Ebola Virus Disease, were Liberia, Equatorial Guinea and Sierra Leone.

    He said that the third category was the Central African Republic whose health systems become very fragile due to conflict.

    Diallo said that domestic funding for HIV/AIDS programmes has grown in the region including efforts in Cote d’Ivoire with 400 per cent increase and pledges by Nigeria and Senegal to increase funding HIV/AIDS programmes.

    NAN

  • Zimbabwe faces broiler chicks shortage after bird flu outbreak

    Zimbabwe faces broiler chicks shortage after bird flu outbreak

    Zimbabwe has been hit by a shortage of broiler chicks after the country’s biggest poultry producer was hit by an outbreak of bird flu in recent months, local media reported on Wednesday.

    Irvine’s was hit by two avian flu outbreaks in May and July, resulting in it culling more than 200,000 broiler parent stock in a bid to contain the highly pathogenic virus.

    South Africa and the Democratic Republic of Congo were also affected by the bird flu.

    In an industry update, the Zimbabwe Poultry Association said the culling of the parent stock at Irvine’s had resulted in a shortage of broiler day old chicks of nearly 500,000 per week.

    The gap has to be covered by more expensive imports from outside the southern African region, it said.

  • Hunger in DRC leaves 7.7m people in urgent need of food aid

    Hunger in DRC leaves 7.7m people in urgent need of food aid

    Hunger in the Democratic Republic of Congo has left 7.7 million people in urgent need of food aid and pushing the country closer to famine than it has been in a decade, food security experts said on Monday.

    Much of the rise in hunger, 1.8 million new people were added to the list, stems from escalating violence in the Kasai and Tanganyika regions, which in Kasai alone has forced 1.4 million people to flee their homes in the past year.

    The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), whose members include UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the World Food Program, said 1.5 million people are now facing “emergency” hunger
    levels.

    “Emergency” means people are forced to sell possessions and skip or reduce their meals. It is one level below a classification of famine in the IPC’s internationally-recognised five stages of hunger.

    “This is the first time in 10 years that we’re so close to level five (famine),” said Alexis Bonte, FAO’s interim representative in Congo.

    “It’s a humanitarian tsunami, but it’s a silent tsunami, that’s the problem,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

    Congo now has 3.8 million people displaced within the country, in addition to a steady flow of refugees from neighboring Burundi, Central African Republic and South Sudan.

    “It has been hidden by other crises,” Bonte said, referring to South Sudan, Somalia, Nigeria and Yemen.

    The crisis has worsened with the advance of fall armyworm, a crop-eating caterpillar that has spread to many parts of the country, including Kasai and Tanganyika, as well as by outbreaks of cholera and measles.

    The country has enough land to feed at least 1 billion people – roughly the population of Africa – and is wealthy in minerals.

    Grinding poverty and years of conflict have left many of its people chronically hungry.

    “I think the donors are really tired of funding the crisis in Congo,” Bonte said, in reference to conflicts that began in the 1990s and have affected millions of people every year since.

    UN has received a quarter of the 812.6 million dollars sought in the humanitarian appeal for Congo this year.

    He said the government needs to stabilise and reduce the conflicts, humanitarian agencies need to be able to give aid, otherwise people are more likely to resume fighting.

    “We cannot hope to make change if we abandon the people.”

    “These people deserve to live in dignity. They have suffered enough,” he said.

    Violence has escalated in Congo since President Joseph Kabila refused to step down after his mandate ended in December.

    Scott Campbell, head of Central and West Africa at the UN human rights office, said the violence had spiraled out of control with the complicity of Kabila’s government.

    Analysts fear growing fighting could spark a repeat of the conflicts seen between 1996 and 2003, mostly in the east of Congo, in which millions died, mainly from hunger and disease.

    Bonte, who has spent seven years in Congo, said the displaced, many of them women, need seeds and farming tools to become self-sufficient, ease pressure on the communities hosting them, and reduce tensions.

    When local NGOs in Chikapa, a town in Kasai region, provided farmland for some 2,000 families who had fled their homes earlier this year, and FAO gave farming equipment, they were able to harvest vegetables to eat and sell within weeks.

    “Normally in a development project, it would take a year to do this.

    “This was just a few weeks, because the ladies were desperate to do something … to escape the trauma they had suffered and … go back to dignity,” Bonte said.

  • UN launches inquiry into Congo atrocities

    UN launches inquiry into Congo atrocities

    The UN Human Rights Council launched an international investigation on Friday into killings and other atrocities in the Kasai region of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    The 47-member Geneva forum adopted by consensus a resolution brought by African countries which also called on the Kinshasa government to cooperate with the team of international experts.

    UN rights chief Zeid Al-Hussein has called repeatedly for the inquiry and said on Tuesday that a militia linked to government has committed a string of ethnically-motivated attacks in recent months, including cutting off toddlers’ limbs and stabbing pregnant women.

    Congo’s government has been fighting insurgents in Kasai since August 2016, triggering fears of a wider conflict in the large central African country, which is a tinderbox of ethnic rivalry and competing claims over mineral resources.

    NAN reports that the Catholic Church said on Tuesday that 3,383 people have been killed in the Kasai region since October 2016, when fighting between Congolese Security Forces and militia members began.

    The UN had previously said hundreds died in the violence.

    The church report also said Democratic Republic of Congo’s national army was responsible for destroying 10 villages.

    The army’s spokesperson could not be immediately reached for comment.

    NAN reports that the DRC on Tuesday rejected an independent investigation into violence in its Kasai region.

    The council will investigate the murder of two UN workers in January.

    “Carrying out an investigation that excludes the Congolese authorities would be unacceptable. It would be as if we were not an independent country,” Justice Minister Alexis Mwamba told reporters in Geneva.

    Al-Hussein had called on the Council to mandate an investigation after Congo missed a deadline to agree to investigate alleged massacres jointly.

    Mwamba said: “that would be a pity, for the simple reason that if a resolution is voted for and doesn’t take us into account, implementing it will be difficult.

    “Do you want experts to go into a foreign country without reporting to the national authorities?

    “How will they get visas? How will they get access to the countryside? The best way would be to go towards a solution that is acceptable for everyone … If you think you can do the investigation without us, go ahead.

  • Congo rejects UN-led investigation into violence in Kasai region

    Congo rejects UN-led investigation into violence in Kasai region

    The Democratic Republic of Congo on Tuesday rejected an independent investigation into violence in its Kasai region which has been called for by a top UN human rights official.

    The UN Human Rights Council is likely to vote on Thuesday on whether to authorise such an investigation into violence that has killed hundreds in central Congo since last August, including two UN experts who were murdered earlier this year.

    “Carrying out an investigation that excludes the Congolese authorities would be unacceptable. It would be as if we were not an independent country,” Justice Minister Alexis Mwamba told reporters in Geneva.

    UN human rights chief Zeid Al-Hussein called on the Council to mandate an investigation after Congo missed a deadline to agree to investigate alleged massacres jointly.

    Mwamba said: “that would be a pity, for the simple reason that if a resolution is voted for and doesn’t take us into account, implementing it will be difficult.

    “Do you want experts to go into a foreign country without reporting to the national authorities?

    “How will they get visas? How will they get access to the countryside? The best way would be to go towards a solution that is acceptable for everyone … If you think you can do the investigation without us, go ahead.”

    He said it was baseless to suggest that Congo had not met a June 8 deadline set by Zeid, since it had presented its roadmap for investigating on May 24 in Kinshasa. Zeid has said the government’s response “falls short”.

    Some legal proceedings had already begun, Mwamba said, including the trial of people suspected of killing UN sanctions monitors Michael Sharp and Zaida Catalan, an American and a Swede who disappeared in March and whose bodies were found two weeks later in a shallow grave.

    Mwamba said about a dozen suspects were identified from a video of the murders, and the four principal suspects have been arrested.

    The others are still being sought.

    In May, a military prosecutor said two militia men had been arrested, and denied that Congolese forces were involved.

    “We have deployed the whole arsenal to establish responsibility – who committed the act, who ordered it, are there politicians at the provincial or national level who could have played any sort of role?,” Mwamba said.

    The minister also said Congolese opposition leader Moise Katumbi, who has been abroad since he was accused of plotting against the state a year ago, was free to come back to Congo whenever he wants, although he would have to face justice.

    Mwamba added that Katumbi could be barred from standing for election because Congo’s constitution does not permit dual nationalities.

    He also commented on a lawsuit against him in Belgium, which accuses him of involvement in the downing of an airliner in 1998, with the loss of 40 lives.

    He said he was unfazed by the lawsuit, and was very happy to respond to the court through his lawyer, and would not invoke diplomatic immunity.

  • Ebola: FG, Lagos seek sanction for Kenya airways 

    Ebola: FG, Lagos seek sanction for Kenya airways 

    The Federal and Lagos State Governments are seeking sanction for Kenya Airways for conveying a dead body from Ebola infested Democratic Republic of Congo, DRC, without approval from the necessary bodies.

    This was disclosed Thursday at a joint press conference held in Lagos.

    Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris, said the Kenya airline conveyed the deceased to Nigeria against the extant regulation.

    He said though the corpse tested negative to the deadly Ebola virus, but it was necessary for proper documentation to have been carried out.

    According to him, “The airline brought the remains of this Nigerian without all necessary documentations that are required to process its clearance by the Department of Port Health Services, Federal Ministry of Health. The Federal Government of Nigeria and relevant agencies condemn this deliberate breach.

    “In line with industry practice, a report has been made to the Nigerian Civil Aviation, the regulatory agency of the Nigerian aviation industry on the occurrence.

    “Necessary steps are being taken by the regulatory authority to sanction the airline in a bid to prevent future occurrence. We have commenced detailed investigation by all relevant agencies of government to determine the immediate and remote intentions of this unfortunate behaviour,” he said.

    Idris emphasized that the Federal Government instituted a ban on the repatriation of human remains into the country in all points of entry as a precautionary measure to avoid importation of any infectious disease, saying that the ban was one of the interventions the nation undertook during the Ebola outbreak.

    He said the Federal Ministry of Health and Port Health Division issued guidelines to all airlines on the procedures to be followed to obtain a waiver before repatriating any human remains into the country.

    “The government will like to reiterate again that the ban is still in force and any attempt to contravene this ban will attract serious sanction. The administration of President Muhammadu Buhari takes the health of her citizens seriously and will not shy away from wielding a big stick on any errant individuals or organisation,” Idris said.

    However, the commissioner said as soon as the dead body was brought in from DRC, the officials of Port Health, Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, NCDC and the Lagos State Ministry of Health investigated the cause of death of the remains and took samples for laboratory investigation.

    Idris said the laboratory report showed that there was no evidence of Ebola infection or any other contagious infections on the corpse, while assuring everyone to go about their normal business without any anxiety.

    “Government will want everyone to be vigilant and encourage all our officials at land, sea and air borders to continue screening of international passengers.

    “Government will want to appeal to all our international passengers to cooperate with our officials who are conducting screening at all our borders. This surveillance shall continue until further notice. All international carriers are also enjoined to cooperate with all relevant agencies of government to ensure unhindered surveillance,” he stated.

    A representative of the Minister of Health, Dr. Joshua Obasanya also said a letter of investigation had been forwarded to Kenya Airline to establish why the airline flew a dead body from DRC into Nigeria without the necessary approval.

    He said if it was found that the airline breached the necessary protocols, it would be sanctioned appropriately, saying that the government was waiting for the airline’s response to the letter.

    Also speaking, Dr. Biodun Ogunniyi, Consultant Epidemiologist, NCDC said there is no fresh outbreak of Ebola in Nigeria, saying that government had the wherewithal to deal with any emergent outbreak.

     

     

  • Christian sect members attack Congo prison, free leader

    Supporters of a jailed Christian sect leader attacked the prison holding him in Democratic Republic of Congo’s capital, freeing him and about 50 other inmates early on Wednesday, the government said.

    Government spokesperson Lambert Mende said that Muanda Nsemi, a self-styled prophet and leader of the Bundu dia Kongo movement – was arrested in March after a series of deadly clashes between his supporters and police.

    Witnesses said they had heard gunfire near Makala prison at around 4 a.m. (0300 GMT) and saw prisoners wearing blue shirts with yellow collars in the streets.

    The UN warned its staff to avoid unessential movement around Kinshasa, saying the situation was calm but unpredictable.

    Soldiers stopped young men for questioning near Nsemi’s house in the city’s district of Ngaliema and arresting some of them, a Reuters witness said.

    Justice minister Alexis Thambwe told a local radio station that, aside from Nsemi, the prison’s most prominent prisoners, including political opposition leaders and soldiers convicted in the assassination of former president Laurent Kabila, had not escaped.

    The president of Bundu dia Kongo’s political wing could not be immediately reached for comment.

    Nsemi has a strong following in southwestern Congo and wants to revive the Kongo kingdom, which flourished for centuries around the mouth of the Congo River.

    Clashes between his followers and security forces have compounded wider tensions across Congo since President Joseph Kabila refused to step down when his mandate expired in December, raising fears of renewed civil conflict.

    At least six of Nsemi’s supporters were killed earlier this year during the two-week standoff at his Kinshasa residence that led to his capture.