The Democratic Republic of Congo has once again been struck by violence of unimaginable brutality. At the end of the week, at the Byambwe health center near Butembo, in the North Kivu province, 17 civilians were savagely murdered, including 11 young women hospitalized in the maternity ward.

The Democratic Republic of Congo has once again been struck by violence of unimaginable brutality. At the end of the week, at the Byambwe health center near Butembo, in the North Kivu province, 17 civilians were savagely murdered, including 11 young women hospitalized in the maternity ward.

Some of them were still breastfeeding their newborns at the moment they were killed.
This massacre, chilling in its cruelty, has deeply shaken the Congolese population and sparked a wave of national and international outrage.

Defenseless victims targeted in a place of life and care

This crime goes far beyond the scope of armed violence: it is a deliberate attack on life, carried out in a space meant to symbolize safety, healing, and hope.
The young mothers who were killed were in a state of absolute vulnerability lying in their beds, focused on the beginning of a new life with their babies. Their brutal execution represents a direct assault on family, motherhood, and, more broadly, the future of an entire community.

A gynecologistobstetrician outraged: “The worst crime one can commit”

Reacting to this tragedy, a Congolese gynecologist and obstetrician expressed his horror and anger at this unimaginable massacre.
He denounced what he described as a heinous act, deliberately targeting women who had just given life. According to him, such a crime resembles a planned strategy of terror, aimed not only at spreading fear among the population but also at destroying a community in whole or in part by attacking its most essential members: its mothers.

His words resonate like an urgent warning:

“The world cannot tolerate the silent genocide of the Congolese people!”

A massacre symptomatic of a conflict that drags on

This tragedy is part of a long-standing pattern of persistent violence in eastern DRC, where massacres against civilians continue to multiply. Armed groups active for decades commit atrocities with complete impunity in villages, in schools, and now even inside hospitals.

In Byambwe, this attack adds to a long list of crimes endured by the population, often in the near-total silence of the international community. The people of North Kivu, South Kivu, and Ituri live under constant threat of killings, forced displacement, and systematic violations of their most fundamental human rights.

An urgent need for action: protect civilians and bring perpetrators to justice

In response to this latest massacre, calls are multiplying to demand:

  • an independent international investigation,

  • the identification and arrest of the perpetrators,

  • reinforced protection of health facilities,

  • and strong, coordinated action from national authorities and international partners to secure the civilian population.

The gynecologist who spoke out insists that it is urgent to put an end to impunity:

“There is an urgent need to act, to prosecute those responsible, and to protect civilians in eastern DRC.”

Conclusion: a silent genocide that can no longer be ignored

The victims of Byambwe must not become yet another statistic in a conflict too often minimized. Their murder is a terrible symbol: attacking young mothers in their hospital beds represents one of the darkest expressions of a conflict that has lost all humanity.

The world can no longer look away. Every day without action reinforces the idea that Congolese lives matter less than others.
It is time to break the silence, acknowledge the scale of this tragedy, and place the protection of Congolese civilians at the heart of international humanitarian and security priorities.

THE EDITORIAL

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