Connecting Waterpeople

UNICEF and partners in DR Congo provide clean water to 700,000 people a day amid conflict

  • UNICEF and partners in DR Congo provide clean water to 700,000 people day amid conflict
    UNICEF-supported cholera rapid response team add chlorine to water collected from a reservoir in Goma, North Kivu province, DR Congo, on 4 February 2025.
    Credit: UNICEF/UNI731762/Benekire

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UNICEF
UNICEF works in 190 countries and territories to save children’s lives, to defend their rights, and to help them fulfil their potential, from early childhood through adolescence. And we never give up.

UNICEF and its partners in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are providing life-saving clean water supplies to 700,000 people a day – around 364,000 children – in the main eastern city of Goma after breaks in the water supply during fighting.

The intense conflict at the end of January left many of the city’s 2 million residents, a third of whom were recently displaced, without access to clean water, sanitation or power.

The humanitarian crisis has raised two pressing needs. Hundreds of thousands of people are now moving from previous displacement sites around Goma to areas of return with limited water and sanitation services. The conflict has also seen the destruction of widely used water infrastructure.

“Clean water is a lifeline. With ongoing cholera and mpox epidemics in eastern DRC, children and families need safe water now more than ever to protect themselves and prevent a deeper health crisis,” said Jean Francois Basse, UNICEF's acting Representative in DRC. “Around the world, children in protracted conflicts are three times more likely to die from water-related diseases than violence. Re-establishing essential services needs to be prioritized, or we risk even more lives.”

Despite the deteriorating security situation, UNICEF responded immediately by trucking water to three health facilities, including the Virunga General Referral Hospital, which treated around 3,000 injured patients. Medical kits to treat 50,000 people were also distributed to health centres overwhelmed with patients.

Around 700,000 people now have daily access to water through the REGIDESO water utility company after UNICEF and MONUSCO provided 77,000 litres of fuel, enabling the five main pumping stations to restart after they had shut down due to powerline cuts. On the east side of Goma, an additional 33,000 people are receiving water through a UNICEF-constructed water network in the Bushara-Kayarutshiyna area.

However, many still rely on untreated supplies directly from Lake Kivu. UNICEF and partners have set up more than 50 chlorine sites along the coast to treat lake water, supplying 56,000 people daily to limit the expansion of the cholera outbreak.

"We are already seeing worrying signs of a rise in cholera cases, closely tied to increased displacement and people relying on unclean water. While gathering data is difficult in these challenging circumstances, with the main rainy season approaching, we’re extremely worried about an explosion in cases," said Basse.

Over the last 10 years, cholera killed over 5,500 people in the DRC, where only 43 per cent of the population has access to at least a basic water service, and only 15 per cent has access to basic sanitation services. In Goma, the conflict has made a dire situation worse. Even before the current escalation, approximately 700,000 displaced people lived in camps with dangerously inadequate access to water, sanitation, and hygiene, exposing children to diseases and increasing risks of gender-based violence for women and girls collecting water and firewood.

In line with the Geneva List of Principles on the Protection of Water Infrastructure, the UNICEF calls on all parties to the conflict safeguard water.

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