Congo Crisis Hits Children The Hardest
Food Aid Still Not Getting Through As Thousands Of Childrens' Lives Hang In The Balance At Packed Refugee Camps
-
-
Photo
A young boy protects his sister as Red Cross workers register people at a displaced people's camp, Nov. 3, 2008 in Kibati, north of Goma in eastern Congo. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo)
-
Photo
Children, seen inside a tent at a camp for displaced people, Nov. 2, 2008 in Kibati just north of Goma in eastern Congo. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo)
-
Photo
Children run as a rumor spreads that a truck is to bring food aid at a camp for displaced people, Nov. 2, 2008 in Kibati, just north of Goma in eastern Congo. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo)
-
Photo
Children wait for food to be ready in an abandoned school at a makeshift camp for displaced people near the village of Kibati some 7 miles north of Goma in eastern Congo, Oct. 29, 2008. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo)
-
Photo
United Nations soldiers walk past a poster of Democratic Republic of Congo's President Joseph Kabila as they patrol a street in Goma, Oct. 31, 2008. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo)
-
-
Play CBS Video
Video
War Against Women
The civil war in Congo is an ethnic conflict, but gender has become a crucial factor, too, as women are bearing the brunt of one of the horrible weapons used in the war: rape. CNN's Anderson Cooper reports.
-
Video
Why People Should Care
Anneka Van Woudenberg of Human Rights Watch explains why people should care about the situation in Congo, and how consumers may be unaware that products they own may come from the nation.
-
Video
Clooney Gets U.N. Role
George Clooney the activist brings him the role of U.N. messenger of peace as he continues to focus on conflict resolution in Africa. Harry Smith reports.
-
Photo Essay
Congo Chaos
Civilians flee their homes as U.N. peacekeepers fail to protect them from rebels.
-
Fast Facts
Democratic Rep. of the Congo
Learn about the people, economy and history.
Thousands spent the night in the open, their mothers trying vainly to shield them from the chilly rain with cotton cloth or plastic sheets torn from sacks. Many are so weak and malnourished they have no protection against disease.
The U.N. humanitarian agency said Sunday that the violence has forced 250,000 people from their homes since rebels began their offensive in late August, swelling a refugee population that already stood at 1 million. More than 60 percent of the refugees are children, according to UNICEF.
Aid groups say that children are being disproportionately hit by a crisis that could expand into a full-blown humanitarian disaster if assistance is not widely distributed soon.
"We're all so hungry. And today it doesn't look like we'll get any food again," said 13-year-old Louise Maombi, who was comforting her sick 3-year-old brother outside a free clinic in a camp nearly four north of the provincial capital of Goma. Twishime was sweating, running a high fever and crying that his body ached - typical signs of malaria.
Click here to learn more about the groups and the history behind the crisis in eastern Congo.
Jaya Murthy, the spokesman in Goma for UNICEF, said emergency food, medication and tablets to chlorinate water had arrived from Rwanda on Saturday and would soon be distributed at the Kibati camp. With many aid workers having fled eastern Congo, the U.N. humanitarian agency said it would be Tuesday before food would arrive at Kibati, where the population has swelled from 15,000 to 50,000.
The first humanitarian convoy to go behind rebels lines since eastern Congo erupted in violence in August carried medical supplies Monday for clinics looted by retreating government troops, but no food.
The head of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in eastern Congo said U.N. peacekeepers were escorting the convoy. Both the Congolese army and the rebel leader assured the convoy safe passage.
If there is no immediate help many could die.
Jaya Murthy, UNICEF, Goma"We know the children are famished," he said. "We don't normally feel the type of desperation" displayed this week at Kibati.
The situation in eastern Congo "could have catastrophic consequences for hundreds of thousands of children who are weak, hungry and vulnerable to killer diseases," he said. "If there is no immediate help many could die."
Nurse Justin Majuwa of the Los Angeles-based International Medical Corps said the worst problems at Kibati's clinic were malaria and acute diarrhea, diseases that can kill a weak baby in two or three days.
In the last couple of days, tens of thousands have headed north behind rebel lines, saying they had no choice but to get home because they could find no shelter or food.
On Saturday, a disconsolate woman wept on the roadside north of Kibati: She had fled the violence into neighboring Uganda and was making her way back through the forest when she lost her only son.
"What shall I do? What will become of me?" she wailed, tearing at the braids on her head. "I can't go home without him and I can't find him."
She was too distraught to give her name.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Part of the British ''chaos theory'' where so-called Prince Phillip can accomplish his goal to reduce the earth''s population by 2/3rds.
The solution is to end ''globization'' and return to a Wesphalia nation-state world where every country acts in it''s own best interest and not for the supposed ''intrinsic'' value or worthless paper fiat-currency.
Birth control does not stop war, hunger, or genocide. Is that all you can come up with? Another stupid idiotic statement. Perhaps you should think before you write!
poor, because they are not able to
pay you back.God will repay you."
Luke14:13-14
There''s a scene in Frank Capra''s
movie Mr. Deeds Goes to Town in
which Gary Cooper explains his
concern for the poor. He says:
"There will always be leaders and
followers. It''s like the road out in
front of my house. It''s on a steep
hill. And every day I watch the cars
climbing up. Some go lickety-split
up that hill in high--some have to
shift into second--and some
sputter and shake and slip back to
the bottom again. And I say that
the fellas who can make the hill in
high should help those who can''t.
That''s all I''m trying to do with the
money I inherited. Help the fellas
who can''t make the hill in high."
I''m Barack Obama and I approve this message.
Birth control does not stop war, hunger, or genocide. Is that all you can come up with? Another stupid idiotic statement. Perhaps you should think before you write!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by nishaboston at 06:32 AM : Nov 03, 2008
Birth Control AND Education. Check.
-
by fjinnw
November 4, 2008 4:19 AM EST
- Keep making babies, theres no hope for these countries.
-
Reply to this comment
-
See all 12 Comments