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Church helps displaced Africans in Congo

Two displaced Central African women receive an envelope containing money to buy food. The United Methodist Committee on Relief provided $50,000 to assist nearly 1,000 displaced families from the Central African Republic living in a refugee camp in Limasa, Congo. Photo courtesy of the Eastern Congo disaster management office.
Two displaced Central African women receive an envelope containing money to buy food. The United Methodist Committee on Relief provided $50,000 to assist nearly 1,000 displaced families from the Central African Republic living in a refugee camp in Limasa, Congo. Photo courtesy of the Eastern Congo disaster management office.

The United Methodist Church has helped nearly 1,000 families from the Central African Republic living in a refugee camp in Limasa.

Limasa is about 70 kilometers downstream from Yakoma on the Ubangi River in the Equateur Province.

Through UMCOR’s Global Migration program, the humanitarian and development relief arm of The United Methodist Church has disbursed $50,000 to purchase food to assist the displaced.

Your gifts on UMCOR Sunday helps support the foundation for the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) to share God’s love with communities everywhere.

“These displaced people are living in a camp set up by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and are going through much more difficult situations,” said Jean Tshomba, coordinator of the United Methodist Committee on Relief’s disaster management office in eastern Congo.

The Congolese territory of Yakoma, which is in the province of North Ubangi, is considered a reception area for refugees and displaced persons from neighboring countries due to its geographical location and security situation.

Coordinators of the United Methodist Committee on Relief’s disaster management office in eastern Congo help distribute money to displaced people from the Central African Republic living in a refugee camp in Limasa, Congo. The relief agency provided $50,000 to assist families with food. Photo courtesy of the United Methodist Committee on Relief. 
Coordinators of the United Methodist Committee on Relief’s disaster
management office in eastern Congo help distribute money to displaced
people from the Central African Republic living in a refugee camp in Limasa,
Congo. The relief agency provided $50,000 to assist families with food.
Photo courtesy of the United Methodist Committee on Relief.

Some 16,000 Central Africans have been living in North Ubangi in northwestern Congo since late 2020. They fled the violence between the Seleka and anti-balaka militias and were welcomed in Yakoma. Most of them are in sites set up by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, but others are staying with host families who have come to their aid.

The Central African Republic is a mission conference within the East Congo Episcopal Area.

The church’s disaster management office distributed cash “to avoid creating a shortage of products on the local market because of the importance of the tonnage sought and also to avoid the price hike on the market of Yakoma,” said Tshomba. “Among the beneficiaries, we have fathers, mothers, widows, orphans, daughters and mothers who live in difficult conditions.”

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees office in Congo facilitated the transport of Tshomba to the Limasa camp. In a letter addressed to United Methodist Bishop Gabriel Yemba Unda, Simplice Kpandji, head of the UNHCR field office in Yakoma, praised the church's efforts to assist the displaced.

On World Humanitarian Day, celebrated on Aug. 19 each year, Modeste Mutinga Mutuishayi, Minister of Social Affairs, Humanitarian Actions and National Solidarity, praised the dedication of those who work to save lives and preserve the dignity of people in the country.

“Humanitarian actors, sometimes risking their lives, do immeasurable work to bring emergency aid to millions of men, women and children repeatedly affected by the consequences of conflict and armed violence, epidemics and natural disasters in the country. It is also an opportunity to salute the Congolese families who spontaneously show their humanity by offering their homes to people in distress, constituting the first line of humanitarian response in the country,” said Mutuishayi.

excerpt story by Chadrack Tambwe Londe, French news editor for UM News in the Congo

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