Fire hits displacement camp in Congo, leaving dozens of families without shelter, UN says

A displaced person living in the Muganga camp with her children and grandchildren near Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, gathers belongings on June 6, 2024 after a fire at a displacement camp in the east destroyed around 50 makeshift tents, leaving dozens of families without shelter. (AFP)
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Updated 07 June 2024
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Fire hits displacement camp in Congo, leaving dozens of families without shelter, UN says

  • The Muganga displaced people camp near the provincial capital Goma was hit by fire Wednesday

GOMA, Congo: A fire at a displacement camp in eastern Congo destroyed around 50 makeshift tents, leaving dozens of families without shelter, according to the United Nations, which said the fire is believed to have started during cooking at a camp.

The Muganga displaced people camp near the provincial capital Goma was hit by fire Wednesday. It had already endured bomb attacks in early May, which killed at least 18 people and injured 32 others, a UN spokesman said. It wasn’t clear what type of explosives were used in those attacks. Most of the victims were women and children.

“While I was trying to empty the house of my valuables, I couldn’t save my most precious items: my tokens to receive various humanitarian assistance,” Anne Marie Nikuze, 60, a displaced person living in the camp with her children and grandchildren told The Associated Press. “The little we had has also gone up in flames,” she said.

“We escaped the recent bomb attacks and now, it’s the fire that has struck us,” Furaha Mulema Mariam, 42, a mother of four, said. “The only luck is that it happened during the day, if it had been at night we would all be dead.”

The decades-long conflict in eastern Congo has produced one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, with over 100 armed groups fighting in the region, most for land and control of mines with valuable minerals. Some are fighting to try to protect their communities. Many groups are accused of carrying out mass killings, rapes and other human rights violations.

The violence has displaced about 7 million people, including thousands living in temporary camps like the one that was attacked last month. Many others are beyond the reach of aid.
 


Bulgaria’s president will start talks on new cabinet after government collapse

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Bulgaria’s president will start talks on new cabinet after government collapse

SOFIA: Bulgaria’s president will start consultations with parliamentary groups next week on forming a new cabinet following the collapse of the government in nationwide anti-corruption protests.
Rosen Zhelyazkov’s minority government had survived six no-confidence votes since it was appointed in January, only to be toppled in the street protests on Thursday by tens of thousands.
President Rumen Radev is set to invite the biggest group in parliament for talks on forming a government. If that fails, the second-largest grouping will get its chance before the president chooses a candidate. If all attempts fail — which is likely — he will appoint a caretaker cabinet until a new election is held in two months.
Analysts expect another election — the eighth since 2021 — would likely produce a deeply fragmented parliament and more political instability as Bulgaria readies to join the common European currency on Jan. 1.
Fears of inflation, reportedly fueled by a disinformation campaign by Moscow, have dampen enthusiasm for the euro. Bulgaria joined the European Union in 2007.
In a last-moment effort to block the country’s path to the euro, the pro-Russian Vazrazhdane party submitted in parliament a draft resolution requesting a one-year postponement of Bulgaria’s entry into the eurozone, citing the absence of a new budget and political instability.
Chances are slim the resolution will pass, but such motions reflect the tensions that are expected to grow until the next election that could change Bulgaria’s pro-Western course.
Analysts expect Radev to form a new party ahead of the next parliamentary election. The left-leaning Radev has criticized the pro-Western government’s support for Ukraine.
“In Bulgaria, the political forces that can stop the Kremlin’s plan to control our country are divided by another major problem in Bulgarian politics,” political analyst Ognyan Minchev said, referring to the bickering between the main pro-Western parties over domestic policies.