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Georgianne Nienaber

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Children Dying in Congo and Leaders "Launch Cries of Alarm"

Posted: 12/30/11 05:21 PM ET

Depending upon your theology, thank God or Mark Zuckerberg for the Facebook community.

Due to an increase of fighting and assassination threats in the Walikale area of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), there is an epidemic of diarrheal disease in children who are fleeing the fighting, killing, looting, burning and raping. Since the communities have no oral rehydration kits or antibiotics, their only recourse is a homemade cocktail of sugar, salt and water. But the concentrations and volumes need to be accurate, and the only recipes immediately available on the Internet are in Creole and English. Urgent calls made to UNICEF, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), and World Health Organization (WHO) for the recipe yielded nothing. The CDC really tried and offered a PDF in French, which outlines symptoms and standard first world medical interventions.

So we updated our status on Facebook to read: "Anyone out there have access to the homemade oral rehydration poster (PDF in French) for cholera...emergency in village in Congo. I can send to Mwami if I can find it."

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Free distribution by International Rescue Committee

Within minutes we had a poster that could be easily translated from English and another that was ready to go in French. It's not much to offer, but maybe once this emergency information is in the hands of community leaders, some children can be saved. There is nothing we can do to stop the murderous rebels; nothing we can do to force the incompetent and corrupt President of DRC, Joseph Kabila, to order his army to protect the "enfants sans defense"; and nothing we can do to provide life-giving medicine. But we can send an email with emergency instructions that were used with great success during the early days of the Haiti cholera epidemic.

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Photo Courtesy of Jo Myers Thompson and the Bamisagora Foundation which offers its materials free of charge

Mwami Lukonga told United Nations-supported Radio Okapi 18,000 people have fled his community as of December 21 and that the rebel Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) burned the village of Buweke near Walikale. Several members of an ad hoc community defense group called the "Guides" were killed. Mwami said that the villagers have sought refuge around United Nations (MONUSCO) bases near Walo Yungu and Walo Ntoto Uroba, but that no help in the form of food or medicine is forthcoming. Other villages, including Chumba 1 and 2, Buteresi, Langer Ndando, and Kimua Mikweti, are "emptied of their inhabitants." Radio Okapi reports, "The traditional chief deplores the poor conditions in which they live. He said the population suffers greatly."

At a time when I speak, people are going to pack up to flee to Masisi. Others turn their backs on Masisi because they say they left this city not long ago. They remember the suffering they have experienced, again because of these attacks.

In an email message, another community leader from Walikale told us that drugs and rehydration supplies are urgently needed because of a cholera epidemic near the sites of Kasheber / Machumbi. The provincial health inspector sent a "small batch of drugs" that were ineffective. Many of the victims are children displaced by the fighting, and they urgently need rehydration. This leader, who is in danger of assassination if we use his name, also mentioned the local self defense group, Guides, which he says was created "due to the absence of state authority in this part of the country; security is lacking and their are constant threats. Civilians are exposed, and they are unprotected because the Armed Forces of the Republic (FARDC) are absent in these areas."

Another village called Buhimba was attacked during the night and this morning the village is about to be pounded by the FDLR. Again people are in disarray. Among new reports of those killed are 9 persons and four civilians in the locality of a consortium Ntoto Walowa-Yungu. [Confirming the Radio Okapi Report] People are now moving without assistance. We have also started recording deaths among the displaced due to epidemics and diseases and the first of the victims are children. We launch cries of alarm to the authority, but without success.
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Malnourished Congolese child near Goma, 2009. Nothing Changes. Photo by G. Nienaber
In other conflicts, local leaders report people fled their homes and, "many died" in the villages of Chumba, Buteresi, Langira and Mukoberwa.

The international community appears to have once again abandoned the innocent in DRC. The United Nations is doing nothing, just as they have done nothing but posture in Haiti. Some rudimentary help is now on the way to Walikale due to a tight-knit Facebook community that rallied to find a simple solution that will not solve the problem, but might save a life or two.

Meanwhile, our contact from Walikale urges everyone to "Pray for our people that ended up very badly in 2011 in the forest."

Makes one with no faith wonder if prayer is "nothing else than being on terms of friendship with God," as the saints suggest. Perhaps God is using social networking on Facebook to truly unite nations.

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sweetiebird
08:42 PM on 01/01/2012
There are so many church groups requesting donations for programs to minister to the poor and downtrodden, but when one requests that they provide evidence that they are in fact ministering to those in need regardless of their location or religion there is a strange silence. The groups are unable to provide more than numerous excuses about their failure to act, be it lack of in-country resources, threats of harm to their members from various political groups, etc.

If in fact the Christian groups mentioned in an earlier comment are capable of helping these individuals then God and their compassion should see them through the trials that they must overcome to reach and help their people since as anyone knows God frequently tests the faithful as part of ensuring that they perform their mission. Otherwise, one wonders if one can only liken them to the fictional evangelist and his family who were portrayed by Barbara Kingslover in her novel "The Posionwood Bible"
07:00 PM on 01/01/2012
Global Health Media Project has just released "The Story of Cholera", a simple animated narrative that brings to life the teaching points of cholera prevention; including the homemade recipe of oral rehydration solution. http://globalhealthmedia.org/library/the-story-of-cholera/ It's available for global distribution free-of-charge under a Creative Commons license.
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Anne Armistead
transforming
10:23 AM on 01/01/2012
I am tired of churches and NGO's profiting from disaster and claiming they do the best job of helping others and that the "people" are lying or complaining if they are anything but grateful for the crumbs. Trickle down doesn't work for the 99%. I take the time to find folks I trust who go to the disaster and then can connect me with local people who I can donate money too. I only have so much money to give and I want to give it to the folks who will efficiently use the resources.
03:34 AM on 01/01/2012
"...and nothing we can do to provide life-giving medicine." Not so, there are several Christian ministries on the ground in the DRC already providing health care, education and other forms of development assistance. Support your favorite charity, because the churches are about the only stable institution in this torn up country and have proven the most efficient at assistance directly to the people that need it.
09:46 AM on 01/01/2012
If in fact there is presently assistance provided by Ministries and other NGO's in Walikali, please provide evidence of this prior to asking for donations.
11:36 AM on 01/01/2012
Although I know there are Christian ministries in Kivu Province, including an Anglican Church diocese, the poignant question here is are they able to reach Walikale and similar villages under constant threat of violence. I am told various rebel groups control or harass most if not all of the roads leading to some of these villages.
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Anne Armistead
transforming
03:54 PM on 12/31/2011
I pray they are able to get this life saving information and have access to clean water (and sugar and salt)......
08:22 AM on 12/31/2011
Children suffer disproportionatly during violent conflicts, and now deadly cholera strikes... thank you for risking your life to tell the world! Now let's act!!!
05:46 PM on 12/30/2011
As a physician who has worked with cholera patients in Haiti,and having also been to North Kivu in Congo, I can attest to the urgency of this situation. If in fact this is cholera, and there is no reason to believe it's not, every day wasted in planning assistance will worsen the epidemic exponentially. Rapid treatment with oral rehydration solution is critical (antibiotic treatment is secondary), but this requires access to clean water.