A war of words has broken out between the United Nations and the DR Congo government which is shunning a donor conference in Geneva to raise USD 1.7 billion to tackle a humanitarian crisis that Kinshasa says has been vastly exaggerated by aid workers.
Prime Minister Jose Makila yesterday said the UN had overreacted and that aid bodies and NGOs in the country were propagating a "bad image of the Democratic Republic of Congo throughout the world".
"The Democratic Republic of Congo declines to participate in the Geneva conference" on April 13, he said.
The United Nations has declared the humanitarian crisis in the DR Congo to be a Level 3, the UN's highest-level emergency.
"While recognising that the country is facing an emergency situation ... the activation of the top-level humanitarian emergency acts as a brake" for development and discourages investors, Makila said.
At least 13.1 million Congolese are in need of humanitarian aid, including 7.7 million who are severely food insecure, the UN Security Council said Thursday in a unanimous statement.
More From This Section
The UN children's agency had sounded the alarm at the end of last year saying 400,000 children risked dying in the central diamond-rich Kasai region, which has been ravaged by conflict.
At least 3,000 people have died and about 1.4 million have been displaced.
"We are not now saying that children risk dying, but we are saying that children are already dying," UNICEF spokesman Christophe Boulierac told AFP.
UNICEF has only been able to care for 65,000 children diagnosed with Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM), the most acute form which can lead to death, Boulierac said. "That's far too few.
"This is not the time to discuss strategies," he said. "If we act now, we can save lives."