The Borneo Post (Sabah)

EU ‘extremely concerned’ after DR Congo shuns aid talks

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GOMA, DR Congo: 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.”

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.

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.

Stylianide­s is scheduled to meet with officials including the foreign minister in the capital yesterday and said he would “try to persuade them of the need” to attend the Geneva conference, which is coorganise­d 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. — AFP

 ?? AFP photo ?? In this file photo people wait on trucks for the Congolese army convoy to start in Kiwanja. For nearly a year now, in Kivu villages, thousands of civilians have been threatened by armed men who kill, rape and loot. The protection of civilians is the...
AFP photo In this file photo people wait on trucks for the Congolese army convoy to start in Kiwanja. For nearly a year now, in Kivu villages, thousands of civilians have been threatened by armed men who kill, rape and loot. The protection of civilians is the...

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