Flood victims denounce aid profiteering in eastern DRC

Girl walks past the ruins of houses swept away by a landslide in the village of Bushushu on the shores of Lake Kivu in Kalehe Territory, DRC on June 9, 2023   -  
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ALEXIS HUGUET/AFP or licensors

Communities affected by last month's floods and landslides in eastern DRC have denounced the distribution of aid in the region.

Members of a group of survivors claim that the crisis management committee in charge of distributing government aid is profiteering from the crisis.

"Here, we found a lot of bodies here when the machine (the backhoe, editor’s note.) passed. There are at least 13 bodies that we found. There are also crates - because on the other side there were shops - we found empty crates, alcohol, money, clothes too, mattresses that were already damaged... but it was on the other side", said  Crispin Chiringa , a Bushushu disaster survivor who lost several family members.

A few days after the disaster, the Congolese government announced aid for 200 affected families amounting to 2.5 million Congolese francs (around  €1,000.00 per family, Ed. ) per household.

"They told us there was a lot of money, but they diverted it themselves. They only gave us 380,000 (Congolese francs - about 150€ - instead of the 2,500,000 - about €990  - announced by the government, Ed.). 

They told us that all the money had been distributed, but they embezzled it. I went to sign (the list of beneficiaries, Ed.), then they prevented me (from recovering the money, Ed.), they said that I had stolen this token (allowing to recover aid, Ed.)", denounced  Namavu Luitire , a woman from Nyamukubi who lost her husband and child in the disaster.

The allegations by the victims are being investigated by a lawyer working on behalf of a member of parliament.

"We have information that there are even bags of rice, bags of flour, blankets and women’s clothing that have been discovered in Kalehe Centre , while the women of Nyamukubi and the women of Bushushu , who are direct victims of these floods, you saw, they spend the night on the ground, they don’t even have anything to eat", said lawyer  Eric Dunia .

More than 2,500 people are still missing. Official figures claim that 443 people have lost their lives.

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