• Sat. Dec 13th, 2025

Global Tracker

Truth And Objectivity

ICRC-Supported Facility Treats 100 Weapon-Related Injuries in 9 Days in DR Congo

BySani Magaji Garko

Dec 12, 2025

Uvira General Referral Hospital (HGR), a facility supported by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has treated almost 100 people with weapons-related injuries between the 2nd and 11th December 2025 following the recent escalation of fighting in several territories of South Kivu province in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Mapenzi Maria, a resident of Sange, a town 40 kilometres from Uvira told officials that “I was quietly at home when suddenly a shell fell nearby as I was carrying my child on my back. A piece of shrapnel hit me. Believing that I was the only one who had been hit, I fell down. That’s when I realized that the child had been hit on my back and killed instantly.”

Over the past few days, the ICRC, in collaboration with the DRC Red Cross, has facilitated the evacuation to Uvira hospital of 26 wounded people, including women and children, from various combat zones.

READ ALSO: ICRC’s Facilities Treated 1,000 Weapon-Wounded Patients This Year in South Sudan

However, the ICRC fears that other people who were wounded will not be able to access adequate care because of the ongoing fighting and the difficulty of crossing the front lines to reach health facilities in areas where few remain operational due to a lack of essential medicines and staff.

The ICRC said for the wounded and sick, swift access to medical care is a matter of life and death.

“The humanitarian situation in the Uvira area remains worrying. It is characterized by massive population displacement caused by the intensification of armed violence observed in recent days, but also by the dysfunction of essential services such as water supply, electricity supply and, above all, the inaccessibility of healthcare due to the deteriorating security situation,” says Djibril Mamadou Diallo, head of the ICRC office in Uvira.

The ICRC is also urgently deploying an additional surgical team to deal with the influx of wounded people.

It said essential medicines and first aid kits were also provided to HGR Uvira, as well as 1,000 litres of fuel to run the hospital’s generators in the event of a power cut.

Due to the fighting, families, women, children and the elderly, who were already living in precarious conditions, are once again being displaced. Many have had to give up everything, including not just their property and livelihoods, but also their hopes for security and peace.

Also, the situation is further exacerbated by the fact that humanitarian actors do not have the capacity to reach large parts of these populations and provide them with assistance due to ongoing fighting.

The ICRC urgently calls on all parties to protect civilian populations and preserve infrastructure essential for the survival of these affected communities, as well as to facilitate access to health care for the wounded.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *