#Democratic republic of Congo
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peachie-keane · 6 months ago
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If you want your donations to go the farthest, I recommend donating directly to people in need and local nonprofits. For the humanitarian crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo, I suggest Goma Actif
Goma Actif is a Congolese nonprofit that has boots on the ground in Goma, DRC, at the Kanyaruchinya displacement camp, providing food to people who have fled the latest offensive by the M23 rebel group.
The Congolese people have expressed frustration that international organizations are slow and fickle when it comes to distributing aid. Goma Actif functions entirely within DRCongo and therefore bypasses international red tape to deliver aid more reliably than external sources.
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karinyosa · 10 months ago
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for anyone who isn’t aware, friendsofthecongo.org/campaigns contains a list of actions you can take to help the democratic republic of congo, including pdfs of postcards you can print and send to a list of tech companies to tell them to stop using child miners AND a letter you can sign and send as well (+ potentially incorporate the main points of that letter into any scripts you might already be using for emails or calls to your reps!). friends of the congo also has a volunteer application form and a youtube channel
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genderqueerdykes · 5 months ago
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🇨🇩 resource page for aiding the democratic republic of congo as well as education & information now available on our blog 🇨🇩 
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this page contains known organizations who are currently providing aid to congo listed by which countries they accept donations from, as well as information and educational articles. we are currently looking to include civilian aid campaigns (gofundmes, etc.) so if you are able to find any please let us know, thank you! we will continue to add as we find resources
we will not turn a blind eye to genocide. keep eyes on congo 🇨🇩 
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yearningforunity · 6 months ago
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Congolese woman with children. 1920-1940
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sheltiechicago · 2 years ago
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Shilatembo, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Traditional dancers perform as the remains of the slain Congolese independence leader Patrice Lumumba arrive in Shilatembo, where the leader was killed in 1961. The family of Lumumba buried his only known remains – a tooth – in the capital, Kinshasa, this week
Photograph: Guerchom Ndebo/AFP/Getty Images
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lilithism1848 · 5 months ago
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yokohama-crackhouse · 3 months ago
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$14,611 USD raised of $20,000 goal
‼️ 5,389 UNTIL THEY REACH THEIR GOAL!!!
‼️ Donations have slowed significantly!! Please donate and share to help the Busimba family, a family of 10 Congolese refugees in currently living in dangerous living circumstances in the states!!!
The father is blind and unable to work, and the mother is unable to work as well, needing to take care of her children and husband. The oldest, who are still in high school, have to work full time jobs in the service industry just to meet ends. Please donate if you can to help support this family!!
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allthegeopolitics · 3 months ago
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The African Union’s health watchdog has declared a public health emergency over the growing mpox outbreak on the continent, saying the move is a “clarion call for action”. The outbreak has swept through several African countries, particularly the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where the virus formerly called monkeypox was first discovered in humans in 1970. “With a heavy heart but with an unyielding commitment to our people, to our African citizens, we declare mpox as public health emergency of continental security,” Jean Kaseya, head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), said during an online media briefing. “Mpox has now crossed borders, affecting thousands across our continent, families have been torn apart and the pain and suffering have touched every corner of our continent,” he said. [...]
Continue Reading.
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khizuo · 10 months ago
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this statistic for the drc's maternal mortality rate comes from this paper about trends in maternal mortality from 2000 to 2020. the estimates in the paper came from the WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, World Bank Group and UNDESA/Population Division (if you want to find this statistic, go to Annex 4.)
this paper published by BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth about maternal mortality in the DRC comes to a conclusion of 620 deaths per 100,000 live births. this study was published in 2022, with data collected from between 2015 and 2020.
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gooogoogaagaaa · 8 months ago
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PETITION TO STOP UNETHICAL COBALT MINING IN CONGO!!
Sign and share with as many people as you can!!!!! Many people, including little kids, are mining in unsafe and unethical conditions in Congo. Sign this petition to stop these horrible conditions and violations of human rights and advocate for boycotting companies that profit from these horrible conditions eg. tech companies, vapes etc!!!!!
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dream-world-universe · 1 month ago
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Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo: Kinshasa, formerly named Léopoldville until 30 June 1966, is the capital and largest city of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Once a site of fishing and trading villages along the Congo River, Kinshasa is now one of the world's fastest-growing megacities. Brazzaville, Republic of Congo, situated on opposite sides of the Congo River.  Wikipedia
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omgthatdress · 3 months ago
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rjzimmerman · 3 months ago
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Excerpt from this story from Inside Climate News:
Africa’s top human rights commission said the Democratic Republic of Congo violated the rights of Indigenous Batwa people when it forcibly evicted them from their ancestral territories and imposed a national park on those lands without the original inhabitants’ consent. 
The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights ordered the DRC to provide the Batwa legal title to their homelands, among more than a dozen other prescribed remedies. 
The decision was decided in 2022 but wasn’t made public until late June of this year. Lawyers involved said publication was delayed because of mistakes made in the text of the French version of the decision, and that the DRC has not taken any action to comply with the decision.
The government’s embassy in D.C. did not respond to a request for comment and also did not participate in the Commission’s proceedings despite requests that it do so.
Since Kahuzi-Biega National Park was established in 1970, the DRC has forced about 6,000 Batwa people, sometimes violently, from an area of rainforest in the eastern DRC the size of West Virginia. Those evictions began on the recommendation of a Congolese conservation organization, according to the Commission’s decision, despite the Batwa having a long and proven track record of protecting and preserving their homelands.
In its decision, the commission sharply criticized the logic behind “fortress conservation,” the removal of Indigenous peoples from their land in the name of protecting nature. That model, born in the United States with the creation of national parks like Yellowstone, has been exported around the world. Increasingly, it is being used in conjunction with some carbon offset programs. 
“If the purpose of creating a park is to protect biodiversity for the good of all, should the way of life, culture and environment of the indigenous populations occupying it not be taken into account?” the commission wrote.
The Batwa’s culture is entirely based on a thriving ecosystem, the commission said, and their removal may have worsened biodiversity in the region because park guards and governmental officials granted forest access to non-Batwa groups that carried out extractive activities including mining and logging, leading to severe deforestation and environmental degradation. The Congo Basin is home to sensitive ecosystems with iconic species, including chimpanzees, forest elephants and critically endangered gorillas. 
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lizardbytheriver · 2 months ago
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This campaign is meant to help Children in North Kivu in the DRC. Children are facing conflict, displacement, terror, and limited access to education in the DRC. There is a shortage of teachers, learning supplies, and safe environments for those children to learn. Donations to this gofundme go towards rebuilding classrooms, providing school supplies, supporting teachers, and engaging with the local community. We have a responsibility to help the Congo, especially in these dire times. Support Focus Congo and The Future of Congo in their campaign to help Congolese Children. May those children grow up to be great leaders, thinkers, workers, humanitarians, and innovators.
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yearningforunity · 7 months ago
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Kinshasa, DRC 1941-1942
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haveyouheardthisband · 3 months ago
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