Congo-Kinshasa: Thousands of Survivors of Sexual Violence in Need of Physical and Psychological Care in DRC

In a new report, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warns of the lack of support available for survivors of sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Given the magnitude of such violence and its impact, we call on the Congolese authorities and their partners to swiftly act in order to respond to the huge medical, legal, socioeconomic, and protection needs that we observe.

The figure is colossal. However, it is only the tip of the iceberg: in 2020, nearly 11,000 survivors of sexual violence were assisted with the support of MSF teams in six of the 26 provinces of the DRC, approximately 30 per day.

“The extent of sexual violence in the DRC is recognised and denounced by many national and international actors,” says Juliette Seguin, MSF head of mission in the DRC. “Yet, this condemnation is not followed by sufficient actions, whether in terms of prevention, care or protection. Our teams on the ground are daily witnesses that needs are far from being met.”

The data collected by MSF in 2020 shows a worrying picture of the physical and psychological state of patients treated for sexual violence: infections, unwanted pregnancies, physical injuries resulting from the violence, severe psychological trauma, including among minors who represented one fifth of patients treated by our teams in 2020.

Published on 15 July 2021, the report stresses the shortcomings in the provision of care to survivors: medical staff inadequately trained, lack of medicine and medical supplies; unavailability of socioeconomic and legal support.

Condemnation is not followed by sufficient actions… Our teams on the ground are daily witnesses that needs are far from being met. Juliette Seguin, MSF head of mission in the DRC.

“The immediate and long-term needs are significant but approaches and funding that would allow them to be met are severely lacking,” says Seguin. “Last year, for the DRC, less than six per cent of international funding requested to respond to humanitarian health needs was disbursed, and 18 per cent of the amount requested for the protection of people and human rights.

“This trend continues in 2021. Beyond funding, some innovative approaches adapted to the local context are not implemented. The resulting lack of support constitutes a double penalty for survivors,” she says.

The shortcomings identified by our teams in the support to survivors mirrors the weakness of the response to gender-based violence (GBV) in the country: in the first half of 2020, the United Nations estimates that barely one in four victims of GBV had access to medical care, 5 per cent to psychosocial assistance, 15 per cent to legal assistance, and only 0.5 per cent to socioeconomic reintegration.

We therefore call on the Congolese authorities, civil society, and their international partners to double down on their efforts to ensure comprehensive and good quality care for survivors of sexual violence – medical, psychological, socioeconomic, and legal support.

These efforts must guarantee better access to urgent and long-term programmes, whether cases are linked to conflict or not, and whether the aggression took place in a conflict zone or in a zone considered ‘more stable’.

“The narrative of sexual violence as a ‘weapon of war’ tends to erase the fact that this violence is also perpetrated by unarmed men and in more stable regions where few actors are present to offer support,” says Seguin.

“While troop movements and fighting clearly increase the number of sexual assaults, these are also perpetrated by people not bearing arms, and their victims are equally in need of care, support and protection,” she says.

In 2020, we provided care for 4,078 victims of sexual violence in North Kivu; 3,278 in Kasaï-Central; 1,722 in Maniema; 907 in South Kivu; 768 in Ituri, and 57 in Haut Katanga.

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