GENEVA / EASTERN DRC CRISIS
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STORY: GENEVA / EASTERN DRC CRISIS
TRT: 01:53
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGES: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 20 JUNE 2023, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
FILE - GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
1. Wide shot, exterior, Palais des Nations
20 JUNE 2023, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
2. Wide shot, speakers at podium
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Tomson Phiri, spokesperson for Southern Africa, World Food Programme (WFP):
“About 5.7 million people have been displaced since March 2022, in North Kivu, in South Kivu, and in Ituri. 6.3 million people have fled their homes across the country, and that is the highest number of people who have been displaced in Africa. The country is continental in size with acres of space, but millions of people have no choice but to live in very overcrowded and squalid camps.”
4. Med shot, cameraperson, journalists
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Tomson Phiri, spokesperson for Southern Africa, World Food Programme (WFP):
“DRC, as some of you may know, is a country of binary oppositions, a country that produces the most precious metal and making the latest technologies has the highest number of food insecure people worldwide; approximately 25.8 million people will face acute food insecurity in 2023.”
6. Close up, attendees
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Tomson Phiri, spokesperson for Southern Africa, World Food Programme (WFP):
“It takes WFP, on a very good day, four days to deliver food assistance from Goma, which is the capital in the east, to a place called Beni, which is 241 kilometers away. But it is taking us between three to four months to do so today because of insecurity.”
8. Close up, camera
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Tomson Phiri, spokesperson for Southern Africa, World Food Programme (WFP):
“We need investment in all facets of life in DRC, be it infrastructure, looking at access to basic services. But most importantly, the country needs peace.”
10. Various shots, speakers, journalists
UN humanitarians issued an urgent appeal on Tuesday (20 Jun) to help millions of people in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where chronic violence and displacement continue to fuel a dramatic hunger crisis.
According to the UN World Food Programme (WFP), since March 2022 alone, 5.7 million people have been displaced in the eastern provinces of North Kivu, South Kivu, and Ituri.
“The country is continental in size with acres of space, but millions of people have no choice but to live in very overcrowded and squalid camps,” or with already overburdened host families, WFP spokesperson for southern Africa, Tomson Phiri, told journalists in Geneva.
Today, due to the lawlessness associated with some 120 non-state armed groups, the UN agency has struggled to deliver vital relief to vulnerable communities where negotiating access is “an ongoing challenge.”
“It takes WFP, on a very good day, four days to deliver food assistance from Goma, which is the capital in the east, to a place called Beni, which is 241 kilometers away,” Phiri said.
“But it is taking us between three to four months to do so today because of insecurity.”
Phiri, who maintained that the humanitarian catastrophe was a “classic example” of a forgotten emergency, explained that displacement had driven food insecurity as people were driven off their land and unable to grow food.
Latest projections indicate that 25.8 million people in the DRC will face acute food insecurity in 2023 – the highest number worldwide.
So many are going hungry despite the country’s natural wealth. Paradoxically, the DRC produces precious metals which supply the world’s most advanced technologies, the WFP spokesperson said.
In addition to surging violence in the east, today’s climate crisis continues to claim lives and livelihoods. At least 400 people died in disastrous flooding in South Kivu last month, and 3,000 homes were destroyed, driving further displacement.
Now more than ever, host communities also face the risk of hunger, Phiri warned, as WFP ramps up assistance to reach 3.6 million people over the next six months.
So far this year, however, only 15 percent of the $870 million required for the humanitarian response in the country has been sourced, Phiri noted.
“We need investment in all facets of life in the DRC: infrastructure, basic services, but most importantly, we need peace,” he insisted.









