%0 Journal Article %T Sexual violence in the protracted conflict of DRC programming for rape survivors in South Kivu %A Birthe Steiner %A Marie T Benner %A Egbert Sondorp %A K Peter Schmitz %A Ursula Mesmer %A Sandrine Rosenberger %J Conflict and Health %D 2009 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1752-1505-3-3 %X From 2003 till to date Malteser International has run a medico-social support programme for rape survivors in South Kivu province, DRC. In the context of this programme, a host of data was collected. We present these data and discuss the findings within the frame of available literature.Malteser International registered 20,517 female rape survivors in the three year period 2005每2007. Women of all ages have been targeted by sexual violence and only few of those 每 and many of them only after several years 每 sought medical care and psychological help. Sexual violence in the DRC frequently led to social, especially familial, exclusion. Members of military and paramilitary groups were identified as the main perpetrators of sexual violence.We have documented that in the DRC conflict sexual violence has been 每 and continues to be 每 highly prevalent in a wide area in the East of the country. Humanitarian programming in this field is challenging due to the multiple needs of rape survivors. The easily accessible, integrated medical and psycho-social care that the programme offered apparently responded to the needs of many rape survivors in this area.Today's armed conflicts mostly occur within state borders and typically drag on for years, even decades. Multicausal in nature, these crises are typically "highly politicised" and "frequently associated with non-conventional warfare" [1,2]. National accountability mechanisms are characteristically absent or severely weakened [3], which consequently gives rise to a climate of impunity for perpetrating all sorts of crimes. These conflicts tend to affect the civilian sphere, regardless of growing international emphasis on the protection of civilians in conflict. Civilians are affected accidentally as they are not well distinguishable from combatants, or intentionally. They may be intentionally targeted because "the goal of warfare is not simply the occupation and control of territory [anymore] [...] 每 it is about destroying the ident %U http://www.conflictandhealth.com/content/3/1/3