A Voice For the Voiceless

MISSION

The Advocacy Project (AP) recruits students to help marginalized communities tell their story and claim their rights.

My RSS Feed

Twitter: #apfellows

Grassroots South Kivu, the Congolese Government and the International Community: Empowerment and Self-protection vs. Neglect?

Charlie Walker | PostedAugust 22nd, 2011 | Uncategorized

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

It has now been two weeks since I arrived in the DRC, although it feels more like two months. Slipping back into life in Uvira happened instantly, almost like sliding into a different skin, the skin of a mzungu (white person) in Congo. My arrival in Uvira was followed less than a week later by the arrival of our Director at the Advocacy Project, Iain Guest, and a whirlwind tour to meet all of our staff based in Fizi territory, and check up on the progress of our 2011 projects, as well as a trip north to Bukavu, to meet with United Nations representatives working on sexual violence and human rights in South Kivu.

Much of our trip to Fizi was centred around one of the most important initiatives which SOS FED staff have been working on this year, that of risk reduction – a set of projects designed to limit women’s exposure to sexual violence. In 2010, an emerging pattern became clear to centre managers – many women were targeted whilst alone cultivating in their fields, or travelling through forest and other unpopulated areas to collect water or firewood. This trend was later supported by a United Nations Fund Population Analysis (UNFPA) report on rape statistics in South Kivu, published in June this year. The report finds that 118 women were raped in Fizi between January and April 2011 (although in reality the figure is undoubtedly higher), and perhaps more worryingly, that 21% of those raped were girls under the age of 18 (4% of those raped were girls on their way to school). As SOS FED had identified, 40% were raped in the forest, whilst fetching water, or whilst cultivating in their fields.

Young Girl from Mboko Carries Water Home for Her Family
Young Girl from Mboko Carries Water Home for Her Family

Young Girl from Mboko Carries Water Home for Her Family

 The first leg of our trip took us to Mboko, one of the villages in Fizi where SOS FED have an aftercare centre for victims of sexual violence, to see how their risk prevention initiatives are progressing. We arrived just in time to witness the inauguration of one such project – a water pump which has been installed in Mboko which allows women to collect water in the village, rather than having to walk through the brush to draw water from the shore of Lake Tanganyika. 
Drinking Straight from the Source!
Drinking Straight from the Source!

Drinking Straight from the Source!

 The well will serve 600 women and girls in the area (who in turn, of course, collect water for the entire family). It crucially provides them with clean water (during the rainy season, water from the Lake becomes dirty as mud is washed downstream from the highlands, and Tanganika is plagued by bilharzia all year round), and of course, a source of water which is closer to home. These key aspects mean healthier families, and ensure that the daily journey to fetch water for drinking, cooking and cleaning is shorter, and above all, safer for the women and girls of the village, minimising their risks of being subjected to sexual violence.

Women gather around the new pump to collect water on inauguration day.
Women gather around the new pump to collect water on inauguration day.

Women gather around the new pump to collect water on inauguration day.

Another risk-reduction initiative that SOS staff have been working on is a communal cultivation project. Centre managers and staff, and those recovering in the centres, developed a forum where women could get together and brainstorm preventative measures that they could take to limit their risk of being subjected sexual violence, empowering women to take the lead in developing a strategy to protect themselves. Together they decided that cultivating in groups would decrease their vulnerability to attacks, and make raising the alarm swifter should incidents occur. Beneficiaries, in addition to women from the surrounding community, have formed working groups of 8, who split the harvest and profits of selling their produce. SOS FED have hired 41 hectares of land in Mboko and Kikonde, a village further south which hosts a second SOS aftercare centre, bringing in local agronomists to provide expertise on the most effective means of cultivation and harvesting to ensure greater yields. 84 women in total are benefitting from the scheme this year, and together they have harvested an impressive total of just under 5,000kg of cassava!!! 

Mountains of Manioc: A Family Shares a Meal Next to some of the SOS FED Harvest
Mountains of Manioc: A Family Shares a Meal Next to some of the SOS FED Harvest

Mountains of Manioc: A Family Shares a Meal Next to some of the SOS FED Harvest

 In addition to protection, the initiative is intended to be a form of economic empowerment for those involved, meaning that they can be self-reliant, providing for themselves and their families. SOS FED have organised for produce to be transported to Uvira, where cassava sells for 10X the price it does in Mboko and Kikonde (since everyone cultivates their own produce in rural villages, prices are extremely low). The women are then given 70% of the profits made, with 30% going back to SOS FED to sustain and improve the cultivation scheme. We are hoping the initiative will expand well beyond SOS FED and become an empowering strategy for women all around South Kivu to protect and provide for themselves, as women leaving the centres take the initiative back to their villages and start cultivation groups of their own, as one woman has already done in a village north of Mboko.

Equality Between Men and Women: SOS Assistant Chamulungu Looks Out Over Newly Harvested SOS Communal Fields
Equality Between Men and Women: SOS Assistant Chamulungu Looks Out Over Newly Harvested SOS Communal Fields

Equality Between Men and Women: SOS Assistant Chamulungu Looks Out Over Newly Harvested SOS Communal Fields

Meeting the centre staff, who are incredibly strong individuals, having lived through over twenty years of conflict, instability and violence themselves, and who are committed to improving the lives of women in South Kivu, was a truly humbling experience. Seeing the impact that SOS FED’s work is having, not just on its own beneficiaries, but also on women in the local community, gives great hope for the future, demonstrating just how much the people of eastern Congo are capable of achieving at the grassroots level, without the huge overhead budgets and the plethora of dollars down the drain that larger organisations are guilty of spending, often to little effect for the people of Congo.

Chamulungu and Mariamu, SOS FED Centre Assistant and Manager in Mboko.
Chamulungu and Mariamu, SOS FED Centre Assistant and Manager in Mboko.

Chamulungu and Mariamu, SOS FED Centre Assistant and Manager in Mboko.

However, despite ray of hope that SOS provides for the women of Fizi, our visit ended on a more sobering note, as we were forced to spend an extra day down south due to attacks on the road between Mboko and Uvira. Since the beginning of April there have been several attacks by armed men, allegedly mai-mai and demobilised soldiers, on trucks travelling on the main road between Baraka and Fizi. On August 3rd, two trucks were pillaged, and there were 8 confirmed rape incidents in Ilila, a village around 15 minutes from Mboko. Two of the women attacked are now being cared for at the SOS FED centre in the village. This was followed, during our short visit to Fizi, by two further attacks. One took place in Senza, 5 minutes north of Mboko, where a reported 13 women were raped – although this figure may increase, since many are still missing in the bush after fleeing the violence. In a separate incident, there were unconfirmed reports of a mass rape in Kananda, a village near Fizi centre which hosts a braçage centre for integrating former rebel armed groups into the national army. In June, ex-PARECO combatants deserted the centre, led by Colonel Kifaru, and proceeded to rape over 150 women in Nyakiele, a nearby village, before being re-accepted into another integration centre further north. As yet, the perpetrators have not been reprimanded, nor brought before any form of justice. Read Walter James’s excellent reports on Nyakiele here.

The above incidents provide a sobering insight into the situation for the people of Fizi territory, and prompt serious questions of the joint stabilisation initiative (STAREC) being carried out by MONUSCO (the United Nations Stabilisation Mission in the Congo) and the Congolese government. The two incidents on the 3rd and 16th of August were carried out on the main road between Baraka and Uvira, both towns which host a significant population of United Nations Peacekeeping troops, on a mandate to protect the civilian population. In neither case, did the blue helmets intervene to halt violations. The incident of Nyakiele (and perhaps a further incident in Kananda which is yet to be confirmed) was carried out by troops being integrated into the Congolese army, the arm of the state designed to provide protection to its citizens. If the international community continues to turn a blind eye to the frankly, horrifying atrocities being committed, particularly against women, in South Kivu, if those mandated to protect the civil population continue to neglect their protection duties, and worse, if the reintegration measures continue to falter, and former rebel groups continue to actively and brutally violate the rights of Congolese citizens, one cannot help but fear for the future of eastern Congo, and its long-suffering civilian population.

SOS Femmes en Danger: No to Crimes Against Humanity
SOS Femmes en Danger: No to Crimes Against Humanity

SOS Femmes en Danger: No to Crimes Against Humanity

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

One Response to “Grassroots South Kivu, the Congolese Government and the International Community: Empowerment and Self-protection vs. Neglect?”

  1. pegah says:

    This is wonderful news Charlie. Congratulations to SOS fed and the women in Fizi on their new addition to the community.

Leave a Reply

Security Code:

Fellow: Charlie Walker

SOS Femmes en Danger


Tags

Advocacy Project African Union Ahadi Quilts Congo congo conflict Congo elections 2011 Congolese Government congo war Democratic Republic of the Congo DRC DRC elections 2011 eastern congo EUrac European Union fizi Heart of Darkness International Conference on the Great Lakes Region Joseph Conrad Joseph Kabila Kamerhe Lutte contre la violence sexuelle me and my friends MONUSCO peace fellow rape Rape Prevention Rape reduction RDC ridge fest Sexual Violence SGBV SOS FED SOSFED SOS Femmes en Danger south kivu staff benda bilili STAREC Sud Kivu Tshesekedi Uvira walter james


Subscribe


 


Newswire

2012 Fellows

Africa

Megan Orr


2011 Fellows

Africa

Charlie Walker
Charlotte Bourdillon
Cleia Noia
Dina Buck
Jamyel Jenifer
Kristen Maryn
Rebecca Scherpelz
Scarlett Chidgey
Walter James

Asia

Amanda Lasik
Chantal Uwizera
Chelsea Ament
Clara Kollm
Corey Black
Lauren Katz
Maelanny Purwaningrum
Maria Skouras
Meredith Williams
Ryan McGovern
Samantha Syverson

Europe

Beth Wofford
Julia Dowling
Quinn Van Valer-Campbell
Samantha Hammer
Susan Craig-Greene

Latin America

Amy Bracken
Catherine Binet

Middle East

Nikki Hodgson

North America

Sarah Wang


2010 Fellows

Africa

Abisola Adekoya
Annika Allman
Brooke Blanchard
Christine Carlson
Christy Gillmore
Dara Lipton
Dina Buck
Josanna Lewin
Joya Taft-Dick
Louis Rezac
Ned Meerdink
Sylvie Bisangwa

Asia

Adrienne Henck
Karie Cross
Kerry McBroom
Kate Bollinger
Lauren Katz
Simon Kläntschi
Zarin Hamid

Europe

Laila Zulkaphil
Susan Craig-Greene
Tereza Bottman

Latin America

Karin Orr

North America

Adepeju Solarin
Oscar Alvarado


2009 Fellows

Africa

Adam Welti
Alixa Sharkey
Barbara Dziedzic
Bryan Lupton

Courtney Chance
Elisa Garcia
Helah Robinson
Johanna Paillet
Johanna Wilkie
Kate Cummings
Laura Gordon
Lisa Rogoff
Luna Liu
Ned Meerdink
Walter James


Asia

Abhilash Medhi
Gretchen Murphy
Isha Mehmood
Jacqui Kotyk
Jessica Tirado
Kan Yan
Morgan St. Clair
Ted Mathys

Europe

Alison Sluiter
Christina Hooson
Donna Harati
Fanny Grandchamp
Kelsey Bristow
Simran Sachdev
Susan Craig-Greene
Tiffany Ommundsen

Latin America

Althea Middleton-Detzner
Carolyn Ramsdell
Jessica Varat
Lindsey Crifasi
Rebecca Gerome
Zachary Parker

Middle East

Corrine Schneider
Rachel Brown
Rangineh Azimzadeh

North America

Elizabeth Mandelman
Farzin Farzad

2008 Fellows

Adam Nord
Annelieke van de Wiel
Juliet Hutchings
Kristina Rosinsky
Lucas Wolf
Chi Vu
Danita Topcagic
Heather Gilberds
Jes Therkelsen
Libby Abbott
Mackenzie Berg
Nicole Farkouh
Ola Duru
Paul Colombini
Raka Banerjee
Shubha Bala
Antigona Kukaj
Colby Pacheco
James Dasinger
Janet Rabin
Nicole Slezak
Shweta Dewan
Amy Offner
Ash Kosiewicz
Hannah McKeeth
Heidi McKinnon
Larissa Hotra
Jennifer Tucker
Hannah Wright
Krystal Sirman
Rianne Van Doeveren
Willow Heske

2007 Fellows

Johnathan Homer
Adam Nord
Audrey Roberts
Caitlin Burnett
Devin Greenleaf
Jeff Yarborough
Julia Zoo
Madeline England
Maha Khan
Mariko Scavone
Mark Koenig
Nicole Farkouh
Saba Haq
Tassos Coulaloglou
Ted Samuel
Alison Morse
Gail Morgado
Jennifer Hollinger
Katie Wroblewski
Leslie Ibeanusi
Michelle Lanspa
Stephanie Gilbert
Zach Scott
Abby Weil
Jessica Boccardo
Sara Zampierin
Eliza Bates
Erin Wroblewski
Tatsiana Hulko

2006 Interns

Laura Cardinal
Jessical Sewall
Alison Long
Autumn Graham
Donna Laverdiere
Erica Issac
Greg Holyfield
Lori Tomoe Mizuno
Melissa Muscio
Nicole Cordeau
Stacey Spivey
Anya Gorovets
Barbara Bearden
Lynne Engleman
Yvette Barnes
Charles Wright
Sarah Sachs

2005 Interns

Eun Ha Kim
Malia Mason
Anne Finnan
Carrie Hasselback
Karen Adler
Sarosh Syed
Shirin Sahani
Chiara Zerunian
Ewa Sobczynska
MacKenzie Frady
Margaret Swink
Sabri Ben-Achour
Paula
Nitzan Goldberger

2004 Interns

Ginny Barahona
Michael Keller
Sarah Schores
Melinda Willis
Pia Schneider
Stacy Kosko
Carmen Morcos
Christina Fetterhoff
Stacy Kosko
Bushra Mukbil

2003 Interns

Erica Williams
Kate Kuo
Claudia Zambra
Julie Lee
Kimberly Birdsall
Marta Schaaf
Caitlin Williams
Courtney Radsch

Login

Login/Manage