DRC: MSF calls for urgent humanitarian assistance for displaced people around Goma

Hundreds of thousands of displaced people sheltering in camps in and around the city of Goma, in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s North Kivu province, have been severely impacted by extreme violence over the past three weeks, and many have now left the camps, according to teams from international medical organisation Doctors Without Borders (MSF). 

As departures from the camps accelerate, MSF calls for the movement of people to be voluntary and for urgent humanitarian assistance to be provided wherever it is most needed.

Since fighting subsided in Goma, and with M23/AFC (Alliance Fleuve Congo) now in control of parts of the region, many movements have been observed in the displaced persons camps and on the roads. Some camps are emptying at speed, with large numbers of people heading towards neighbouring areas, including towards their places of origin. MSF staff have also observed displaced people heading towards the city of Goma, while some displaced people from camps that have been destroyed are heading for the remaining camps west of Goma.

Internally displaced people leaving Kimachini camp, located next to Goma | Date taken: 11/02/2025 | Photographer: Daniel Buuma | Location: DRC
Internally displaced people leaving Kimachini camp, located next to Goma | Date taken: 11/02/2025 | Photographer: Daniel Buuma | Location: DRC
"This week, some camps have been largely emptied in just a few hours,” says Thierry Allafort-Duverger, head of MSF's emergency programmes in Goma. “People are leaving with what little they have. We don't know in what conditions they will travel home or what they will find there. But it is crucial that these movements are voluntary and that the reception conditions in their areas of returns are safe."

Displaced people appear to be leaving the camps for a number of reasons. Many residents of the camps mention evacuation orders that were reportedly given by members of the M23, while others receive official messages to the contrary. Others express a desire to leave after years surviving in desperate conditions. Some people, however, are choosing to stay on in the camps, unsure of security conditions and what they may find at home.

"The messages remain confused and unclear, but what is certain is that the population is very worried, oscillating between rumours and reality," says Allafort. "Families are extremely vulnerable. Humanitarian aid is more than necessary, both for those who are leaving and those who are staying. Unfortunately, we are seeing that a number of NGOs have been unable to resume their activities or have suspended their services, dismantling their structures in the camps."

The population’s vulnerability and need for assistance is illustrated by the fact that, in recent days, MSF teams have witnessed some people dismantling humanitarian facilities and taking with them anything that could potentially be of use: chairs, metal sheeting, tarpaulins, ropes and so on. Other people, however, have tried to protect MSF structures from looting.

For people leaving the camps, MSF is particularly concerned about the level of access to health services when they get to their places of return. After several years of war, many health facilities have been looted or abandoned and will be unable to provide adequate medical care to those who need it, either now or in the longer term.

Internally displaced people leaving Kimachini camp, located next to Goma. | Date taken: 11/02/2025 | Photographer: Daniel Buuma | Location: DRC
Internally displaced people leaving Kimachini camp, located next to Goma. | Date taken: 11/02/2025 | Photographer: Daniel Buuma | Location: DRC

For the past three years, living conditions in the camps around Goma have been desperate, even scandalous. But the situation in people’s places of return is likely to be equally disastrous if NGOs, UN agencies and authorities fail to provide the minimum level of essential services. Humanitarian organisations must be guaranteed access to all places of return, says MSF, and returnees must be able to access essential health services, including support for survivors of sexual violence. Failure to provide these services risks exacerbating people’s health needs.

To ensure a minimum level of healthcare for displaced people in areas of return, MSF has set up mobile clinics on roads leading out of Goma to the east and the north. MSF teams are also carrying out assessments in the areas to which people are returning.

Internally displaced people leaving Kimachini camp, located next to Goma. | Date taken: 11/02/2025 | Photographer: Daniel Buuma | Location: DRC
Internally displaced people leaving Kimachini camp, located next to Goma. | Date taken: 11/02/2025 | Photographer: Daniel Buuma | Location: DRC

Even as the situation in and around Goma is evolving rapidly, MSF teams continue to provide vital assistance to people still living in the camps. This includes providing medical care, malnutrition treatment, cholera treatment and care for survivors of sexual violence. MSF is also distributing clean water and food and reinforcing sanitation in the camps. Meanwhile MSF medical teams in Kyeshero and Virunga hospitals in Goma are caring for people wounded in the violence.

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Nkosi Mahlangu

Nkosi Mahlangu

Communications Specialist, Doctors Without Borders (MSF Southern Africa)

About Doctors Without Borders (MSF)

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is a global network of principled medical and other professionals who specialise in medical humanitarian work, driven by our common humanity and guided by medical ethics. We strive to bring emergency medical care to people caught in conflicts, crises, and disasters in more than 70 countries worldwide.

In South Africa, the organisation is recognised as one of the pioneers of providing Antiretroviral Treatment (ART) in the public sector and started the first HIV programmes in South Africa in 1999. Until today, the focus of MSF’s interventions in the country has primarily been on developing new testing and treatment strategies for HIV/AIDS and TB in Eshowe (Kwa-Zulu Natal) and Khayelitsha (Western Cape).

In Tshwane, we run a migration project, and we offer medical and psychosocial care to migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers, who struggle to access public health services under South Africa’s increasingly restrictive.

Previously we offered free, high-quality, confidential medical care to survivors of SGBV in Rustenburg.

To learn more about our work in South Africa, please visit this page on our website (www.msf.org.za). To support MSF’s work:

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