International Women’s Unity Summit
March 18, 2018DRC April News Roundup
March 18, 2018Nutrition in DRC: How to Make a Difference
“Exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months, food groups, hygiene… There were a lot of things that I had never heard of” -Maman Manga, devoted mother battling malnutrition.
While nursing her baby, this dedicated mother recalls her first pregnancy, when she was only 17. The baby’s first months were particularly arduous for the young girl as he was frequently sick and cried a lot. During a visit to her local health centre she finally learnt that her 8 month-old boy was suffering from malnutrition.
Women At Work
A photojournalism project by New York-based documentary photographer Alison Wright.
Thailand Makes Historic Seizure Of Smuggled Ivory
Customs officials in Thailand say they have made the biggest seizure of smuggled ivory in the country’s history. The consignment of elephant tusks weighed four tonnes and was tracked from the Democratic Republic of Congo over a two-month period. Officials said the multi- million dollar haul was going to Laos, from where they believed it would be sold to customers across Asia.
Congo Opposition Threatens Boycott of Provincial Elections
KINSHASA – Opposition parties in Democratic Republic of Congo threatened on Monday to boycott provincial elections this year unless voting rolls are first updated, the latest twist in a bitter dispute between the government and opposition.
Billion Dollar Wildlife And Gold Trade Fuelling DR Congo War: UN
Smuggling of ivory, gold and timber worth over a billion dollars a year is fuelling war by funding dozens of rebel groups in Democratic Republic of Congo, a UN report has warned. “Militarized criminal groups with transnational links are involved in large-scale smuggling” of “gold, minerals, timber, charcoal and wildlife products such as ivory” of up to $1.3 billion (1.2 billion euros) each year from eastern DRC, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said. The revenues finance at least 25 armed groups — but up to 49 according to some estimates — that “increasingly fuel the conflict” in the war-torn region, the report read.