20-10-2009 Operational update Central African Republic: thousands affected by violence in Haut-Mbomou Violence resulting from the presence of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) has caused the displacement of several thousand civilians in south-eastern Central African Republic, currently the scene of skirmishes between the LRA and the Ugandan armed forces. ICRC emergency aid is reaching those hardest hit.
© ICRC/C.-V. Magendo
Displaced people doing their washing in a river near the city of Obo.
The ICRC's aid operation is being carried out in cooperation with the Central African Red Cross Society. Civilians who fled the violence are currently in the south-west of the country without news of their families and without any means of communication. ICRC staff in the Central African Republic are working in close cooperation with their counterparts in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and in Sudan to restore contact between people who have been thrust apart, for example by enabling them to exchange Red Cross messages (brief messages containing family news).
© Central African Red Cross
An unaccompanied 14-year-old child recently reunited with his family in Obo.
With the help of the Red Cross Society of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, a special effort is being made to find the families of unaccompanied children. An unaccompanied Central African child was recently reunited with his family in Obo. The 14-year-old had been abducted in March 2008. He recovered his freedom in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and was returned to Bangui by MONUC (the United Nations Organization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo). With ICRC help his family was rapidly located in Obo, and the child was reunited with his parents who had believed him dead. To enable those who fled the violence in Obo to cope with their most pressing needs, the ICRC distributed some 900 household sets of tarpaulins, blankets, sleeping mats, mosquito nets, clothing, kitchen utensils and hygiene items to over 3,300 people. More than a thousand people have arrived in Obo since the first inventory of requirements was made.
© ICRC/C.-V. Magendo/cf-e-00280
Red Cross volunteers fixing a borehole in M'Boki to make clean drinking water more easily available.
Most medical centres in villages around Obo and M'Boki were looted and some were destroyed during the events of the past few months. The M'Boki medical centre and the Obo hospital can still admit patients – residents, displaced people or refugees – but they often lack medicines and other medical items. The ICRC has supplied medicines for treating around 6,000 patients against malaria and fever. It has also provided the M'Boki medical centre with bandages for first aid and the Obo hospital with surgical instruments and dressing materials. The ICRC has provided technical and financial support to boost the operational capacity of the Central African Red Cross in Haut-Mbomou. To raise awareness of the activities it carries out in behalf of victims of armed violence in a part of the country where it has been present only for a short time, the ICRC organized presentations for armed actors, civilian authorities, community and religious leaders, and the local Red Cross chapter. For further information, please contact: Kelnor Panglungtshang, ICRC Bangui, tel: +236 72 73 02 88 or +236 72 07 69 64 Anna Schaaf, ICRC Geneva, tel: +41 22 730 22 71 or +41 79 217 32 17 |