Eastern DR Congo fighting kills scores, cuts food aid and drives mass displacement

According to media reports, members of the armed group M23 entered the key city of Uvira on Wednesday and residents described a sense of fear and uncertainty.


UN News | Updated: 15-12-2025 10:40 IST | Created: 15-12-2025 10:40 IST
Eastern DR Congo fighting kills scores, cuts food aid and drives mass displacement
The vast majority of World Health Organization (WHO) member States say 40 to 90 per cent of their populations now use traditional medicine. That’s according to Shyama Kuruvilla, director of WHO’s Global Traditional Medicine Centre, established in 2022 to tap into the potential of these systems for healthcare and well-being. “With half the world’s population lacking access to essential health services, traditional medicine is often the closest or only care available for many people,” Ms. Kuruvilla told a virtual media briefing on Wednesday, ahead of this month’s WHO Global Summit on Traditional Medicine. “For many others, it’s a preferred choice because it is personalised and holistic. It’s bioculturally aligned and it supports overall well-being rather than only treating specific disease symptoms,” she continued. What is traditional medicine? According to WHO, traditional medicine comprises practices and knowledge from various historical and cultural contexts, which pre-date biomedicine and mainstream medical practices. Traditional medicine emphasizes nature-based remedies and holistic, personalised approaches to restore balance of mind, body and environment. Ms. Kuruvilla said global demand for traditional medicine is rising due to chronic diseases, mental health needs, stress management and the search for meaningful care. Despite widespread use and demand, however, less than one per cent of global health research funding currently supports it, she added. What will happen at the Summit? The Second WHO Global Summit on Traditional Medicine will take place from 17 to 19 December and will bring together policy makers, practitioners, scientists and Indigenous leaders from around the world. It will be held in New Delhi, India, and online. Participants will discuss how to implement the WHO Global traditional medicine strategy through 2034, which aims to advance evidence-based traditional, complementary and integrative medicine and provides guidance on regulation and multi-stakeholder collaboration. “The Global Summit aims to foster the conditions and collaborations required for traditional medicine to contribute at scale to the flourishing of all people and our planet,” Ms. Kuruvilla concluded. Simultaneously, WHO is launching a global traditional medicine library — the first-of-its-kind digital platform with over 1.6 million scientific records on the topic, a traditional medicine data network and a Framework on Indigenous Knowledge, Biodiversity and Health, among other initiatives. Image Credit: Twitter(@UN_SPExperts)

Intensifying fighting in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has claimed more than 70 civilian lives, displaced over 200,000 people and cut thousands off from food assistance, prompting UN warnings of a rapidly expanding humanitarian emergency spilling across borders.

 

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHAsaid the situation in South Kivu province has deteriorated sharply since 2 December due to heavy fighting across multiple territories, including Uvira, Walungu, Mwenga, Shabunda, Kabare, Fizi and Kalehe.

According to media reports, members of the armed group M23 entered the key city of Uvira on Wednesday and residents described a sense of fear and uncertainty.

Radio Okapi, run by the UN peacekeeping mission MONUSCO, reported that more than 74 civilians have been killed and at least 83 wounded in clashes between Congolese forces and armed groups since early December. The station said thousands more have fled across borders into Burundi and Rwanda.

Most of the displaced inside South Kivu are sheltering in overcrowded sites, facing heightened protection risks, poor sanitation and the growing threat of disease outbreaks. Displaced women and girls face heightened risks of gender-based violence in overcrowded shelters.

Food assistance suspended

Humanitarian assistance programmes, including food aid and healthcare have been affected by the insecurity.

The UN World Food Programme (WFP) has suspended operations across South Kivu, cutting off 25,000 people from life-saving food support, according to UN Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq.

“Host families, already facing emergency levels of food insecurity, are sharing the last of their food with displaced people,” he told journalists in New York.

At least 32 schools in Uvira supported by WFP have halted classes to shelter displaced families, leaving more than 12,000 children without what is often their only hot daily meal. Humanitarian agencies warned that food stocks in the area could run out within weeks if access and funding are not restored.

Cross-border fears grow

“The humanitarian impact of the crisis is now spilling across borders,” Mr. Haq said, reporting that nearly 25,000 people crossed into Burundi between 5 and 8 December, with additional arrivals also reported in Rwanda.

In both countries, humanitarian partners and national authorities are scaling up emergency assistance, including hot meals, safe water and health services.

The escalation comes despite diplomatic efforts to reduce regional tensions. Last week, the DRC and Rwanda signed a United States-backed peace accord, welcomed by the United Nations as a “critical step” toward restoring trust.

Funding challenges deepen the crisis

Funding shortfalls are compounding the emergency.

The DRC Humanitarian Response Plan is only 22 per cent funded, leaving a gap of nearly $2 billion, Mr. Haq warned. In Burundi, less than $33 million has been mobilized against a requirement of almost $77 million to support new arrivals.

“We call on all parties to the conflict to immediately cease hostilities, uphold international humanitarian law, protect civilians and civilian infrastructure, and ensure safe, rapid and unimpeded humanitarian access,” he said.

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