GENEVA / EASTERN DRC UPDATE
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STORY: GENEVA / EASTERN DRC UPDATE
TRT: 01:55
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 13 JUNE 2025, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND / FILE
FILE - GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
1. Wide shots shot, exterior, Palais des Nations
13 JUNE 2025, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
1. Wide shot, Palais des Nations flag alley
2. Med shot, podium speakers, TV screen showing UNDP Resident Representative Damien Mama speaking from DR Congo
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Damien Mama, Resident Representative, DR Congo, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP):
“The stories people are telling me, it has been the major position - the last position - that the M23 was able to take before moving and taking Goma. Without taking Sake, they could not move further to Goma and you remember that this was a place where the former Governor was also killed in action.”
4. Med shot, attendee
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Damien Mama, Resident Representative, DR Congo, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP):
“So, what's the need: that is also restoring businesses supply, providing income-generating activities for the women and the youth creating jobs and also responding to one of the major issues here which is sexual gender-based violence.”
6. Med shot, journalist
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Damien Mama, Resident Representative, DR Congo, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP):
“The economy has suffered a lot. The banks have closed, businesses have been destroyed and many are now those who are still operating and operating under 30 percent of their capacity, which is a major blow to their businesses.”
8. Med shot, journalists
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Damien Mama, Resident Representative, DR Congo, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP):
“So, about our response plan here in North Kivu, UNDP intends in the next five months to deliver - to support - the creation of 1,000 jobs, provide the restoration of basic infrastructure which will benefit about 15,000 people.”
10. Med shot, journalists
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Damien Mama, Resident Representative, DR Congo, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP):
“Our response plan is evaluated at $25 million. We have so far secured $14 million thanks to [South] Korea, Canada, UK as well as Sweden; and our call will be to encourage other countries and donors to provide us with [the] $11 million gap.”
12. Med shot, attendee
13. Wide shot, journalists
As diplomatic efforts continue to end fighting in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the UN development agency (UNDP) issued an appeal today (13 Jun) on behalf of people uprooted by the violence to help them rebuild their lives and livelihoods.
Since the beginning of the year, Rwanda-backed M23 fighters have swept across eastern DRC, taking key cities including Goma and Bukavu. The violence has displaced more than one million people in Ituri, North Kivu and South Kivu provinces.
Speaking from the village of Sake in North Kivu, UNDP Resident Representative Damien Mama described meeting a woman whose house had been destroyed after she fled the advancing fighters in January.
“You know, with five children, you can imagine what this represents,” Mama said. “She was telling me that [her family] were given food and temporary shelter; but what she needs is to go back to her farm to continue farming, to continue her activities, and also have her home rebuilt.”
All those newly displaced by the M23 rebels are in addition to the five million people already living in displacement camps in eastern DRC. Health workers have repeatedly warned that the crowded and unsanitary conditions provide ideal conditions for the spread of diseases including mpox, cholera and measles.
Given the scale of need it is urgent that small businesses get the help they need to get up and running again “providing income-generating activities for the women and the youth creating jobs”, the UNDP official insisted.
“The economy has suffered a lot,” he explained. “The banks have closed, businesses have been destroyed and many are now those who are still operating and operating under 30 percent of their capacity, which is a major blow to their businesses.”
At the same time, the UN agency remains committed to helping the many women and girls impacted by alarming levels of sexual violence. This echoes an alert issued last month by the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), that during the most intense phase of this year’s conflict, a child was raped every half an hour.
In the next five months, UNDP intends to support the creation of 1,000 jobs and restore basic infrastructure, benefiting about 15,000 people.
To do this, the UN agency will need $25 million.
“We have so far secured $14 million thanks to [South] Korea, Canada, UK as well as Sweden; and our call will be to encourage other countries and donors to provide us with [the] $11 million gap.”









