MSF condemns surge of violence in DR Congo’s Ituri province

Members of the M23 rebel group stand guard as people attend a rally addressed by Corneille Nangaa, Congolese rebel leader and coordinator of the AFC-M23 movement, in Bukavu, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo Feb. 27, 2025. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 25 March 2025
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MSF condemns surge of violence in DR Congo’s Ituri province

  • MSF said it had seen “a renewed spike in atrocities in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s Ituri province”
  • More than half of the victims of violence that MSF treated at its clinic in the provincial capital, Bunia, up until mid-March were women and children

KINSHASA: Doctors Without Borders (MSF) on Tuesday said civilians were suffering “horrific” wounds in a new surge in violence in the northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s turbulent Ituri province.
Gold-rich Ituri has long been hit by conflict between ethnic militia as well as attacks by the Daesh-linked group, the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF).
It lies just north of North and South Kivu provinces, where the Rwanda-backed M23 armed group has seized large tracts of territory in recent months, but the fighting is not linked to the violence in Ituri.
The medical charity, known by its French acronym MSF, said it had seen “a renewed spike in atrocities in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s Ituri province, where its medical teams are providing care for civilians with horrific injuries.”
Citing UN figures, it said violence had displaced around 100,000 people since the beginning of the year, with attacks killing more than 200 people in January and February alone.
More than half of the victims of violence that MSF treated at its clinic in the provincial capital, Bunia, up until mid-March were women and children, it said.
“In February, MSF’s medical teams treated children as young as four and pregnant women for machete and gunshot wounds following militia attacks” in which sometimes other family members had been killed.
Healthcare facilities are also prey to attacks, MSF warned, saying threats by armed groups had forced a hospital to suspend its activities and evacuate patients this month. Other health centers have been destroyed.
The crisis in Ituri “is characterised by repeated displacement, in which violence forces civilians to pick up and start their lives over, again and again.
“What is worse, is that the stories patients and communities tell us represent only the tip of the iceberg,” the NGO said.
Ituri suffered a conflict between ethnic-based militias from 1999 to 2003 that killed thousands before the intervention of a European force.
In 2021, Uganda deployed troops with the DRC’s consent to Ituri, ostensibly to clear the area of the ADF.
The Ugandan army has also launched an operation this month against a militia known as the Cooperative for the Development of Congo (Codeco).


President of Kazakhstan to join Donald Trump’s ‘Board of Peace,’ spokesperson says

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President of Kazakhstan to join Donald Trump’s ‘Board of Peace,’ spokesperson says

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Kazakhstan says it was invited to ‘Board of Peace’


ASTANA: Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev will join the “Board of Peace” proposed by US President Donald Trump after accepting an invitation to do so and wants to contribute to bringing about a stable Middle ‌East peace, his ‌spokesperson said on ‌Monday.
The ⁠board ​would be ‌chaired for life by Trump and would start by addressing the Gaza conflict and then be expanded to deal with other conflicts, according to a copy of the letter ⁠and draft charter seen by Reuters.
Tokayev’s spokesman, Ruslan ‌Zheldibay, said that Kazakhstan’s leader ‍was one ‍of the first leaders to ‍receive an invitation from Trump.
“The head of state sent a letter to the president of the United States expressing sincere ​gratitude and confirming his agreement to join this new association,” Zheldibay ⁠said.
“President K. Tokayev confirmed Kazakhstan’s commitment to contribute to the achievement of lasting peace in the Middle East, strengthening interstate trust and global stability,” he added.
The news was first reported by the Tengri news outlet.
Trump has invited 60 countries to join the “Board of Peace,” but permanent membership ‌will be available to those who pay $1 billion.