In Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), fighting between the Congolese army and its allies against the armed group M23 has forced an estimated 1.5 million people from their homes, contributing to one of the world's largest and longest displacement crises.
Since February, an escalation of violence in South Kivu province has driven another exodus of civilians, many of whom were already displaced by the conflict in neighboring North Kivu. Many have settled in camps where they live in makeshift shelters without adequate access to water, hygiene, and food.
Through our medical and humanitarian work in Bugeri camp in South Kivu, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams have met displaced people living the everyday consequences of the M23 crisis. Here’s what they shared with us.
Photography by Hugh Cunningham
Karuba, North Kivu
Florence
Before the war, I grew and harvested beans and potatoes. I cooked them and served them to my children, who were healthy. Until we fled the fighting, none of them had been malnourished. Today, feeding them has become difficult.
The day the village was attacked, we were in the field. I fled with my children and the neighbors. Together we arrived at the town of Shasha but the fighting resumed and we fled again, this time to the Bugeri camp [in South Kivu]. [During] the flight I lost my husband. I don't know which path to take to find him. It's already been four months.
North Kivu
Marie-Thérèse
I am 80 years old. I had to flee so often that I lost memory of the different trips. My house was burned down. My village was destroyed. Since then, I have been looking for a place to live in peace with my nine children and my grandchildren.
During the exodus, while we were still in North Kivu, a bomb exploded in Sake. Four of my children died that day. The rest of the family fled here again.
Masisi territory, North Kivu
Francine
I was a farmer in Masisi territory. Every day I farmed other people's fields in exchange for a salary that was enough for me to take care of my children.
When armed men burst into my village, I was in the field and my children were playing in the yard. We immediately fled. I was carrying my baby on my back, one child in each hand, [with] the other four running in front of me. I lost sight of my husband. We didn't dare rest because we heard the shots all around. After five days of walking without knowing where to go, we finally reached the town of Minova.
Masisi territory, North Kivu
Mukeshimana
I arrived at Bugeri camp on January 5, 2024. Before, I lived in a village in the Masisi territory with my nine children and my husband.
One day while we were in the field, shots rang out. Scared, my husband rushed to our house to gather our children and pack some things. I also ran to him but when I arrived at our house, I found him lying on the floor, bathed in his blood. It only took one bullet to take his life.
Masisi territory, North Kivu
Zawadi
I came on foot with my 10 children. In the village I ran a small business, I sold onions and cabbages. I did not see the armed men, but I heard exchanges of fire every day, getting closer and closer. Before it was too late, I decided to leave and took my children on the road. We spent several nights on the way before arriving here in Bugeri on January 8.
I built my hut myself. Unfortunately, one evening it caught fire.