South Kivu

From Vero - Wikipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:About Template:Infobox settlement

South Kivu (Template:Langx; Template:Langx) is one of 26 provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.<ref name="cia.gov"> Template:Cite web</ref> Its capital is Bukavu. Located within the East African Rift's western branch Albertine Rift, it is bordered to the east by Lake Kivu, Rwanda, Burundi, and Tanzania; to the west by Maniema Province; to the north by North Kivu Province; and the south by Tanganyika Province.<ref name=":9">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":6">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":10">Template:Cite web</ref> The province covers an area of approximately 69,130 square kilometers<ref name=":43">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and has an estimated population of 8,147,400 as of 2024.<ref name=":10" /><ref name=":46">Template:Cite web</ref>

The region has historically been inhabited by various Bantu-speaking ethnic groups, including the Bamushi, Bafuliiru, Bahavu, Banyindu,<ref name=":28">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=":29">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":123">Template:Cite web</ref> Babembe, Babuyu, Balega, Babwari,<ref name=":30">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":02">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":31">Template:Cite web</ref> Baholoholo, Banyanga, Bavira, Bakusu, Batembo, Barongeronge, and Baswaga, as well as Pygmy communities.<ref name=":33">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":34">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":35">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":36">Template:Cite web</ref> During the colonial period, the borders of the Congo Free State were established by the 1885 Berlin Conference, placing all of Lake Kivu and both banks of the Ruzizi River within the Free State.<ref name=":11">Template:Cite journal</ref> The region's boundaries were later subject to disputes, including the Kivu frontier incident of 1909, which was resolved in 1910 when the eastern portion of Kivu was allocated to Uganda Protectorate and German East Africa.<ref name=":11" /><ref name=":37">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":38">Template:Cite book</ref> Kivu District was formally created in 1912 and later divided into Sud-Kivu and Nord-Kivu Districts in 1951.<ref name=":39">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":40">Template:Cite web</ref> After a series of administrative reorganizations, South Kivu became a separate province in 1988, alongside North Kivu and Maniema.<ref name=":18">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Administratively, South Kivu is divided into eight territories: Fizi, Idjwi, Kabare, Kalehe, Mwenga, Shabunda, Uvira, and Walungu, which are further subdivided into sectors and chiefdoms.<ref name=":9" /> The province contains four officially recognized cities: Bukavu, Uvira, Baraka, and Kamituga.<ref name=":5">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=":8">Template:Cite web</ref> Its economy is primarily based on agriculture, livestock farming, trade, and services.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Significant natural and cultural landmarks include the Kahuzi-Biéga National Park and Itombwe Nature Reserve, both designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites, as well as Idjwi Island, Lake Kivu beaches, and Kavumu Airport.

Since the First Congo War (1996–1997), South Kivu has experienced persistent armed conflict and instability, particularly during the Second Congo War (1998–2003).<ref name=":32">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":19">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":21">Template:Cite web</ref> The province has been a battleground for various armed groups, including the Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo-Zaire (AFDL), the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA), Congolese Rally for Democracy (RCD),<ref name=":32" /><ref name=":20">Template:Cite web</ref> Mai-Mai local community-based militias as well as March M23 Movement (M23), RED-Tabara, Twirwaneho, Ngumino, and Android.<ref name=":22">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":110">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Ongoing insecurity, fueled by competition over natural resources has led to widespread human rights abuses, displacement of civilians, and humanitarian crises.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="actualite">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Geography

Kahuzi-Biéga National Park, South Kivu, October 2017

South Kivu is situated in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, forming part of the African Great Lakes region. It shares borders with North Kivu to the north, Maniema to the west, and Tanganyika to the south. To the east, the province is bounded by Rwanda, Burundi, and Tanzania.<ref name=":9" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The landscape is predominantly mountainous, with the Mitumba Mountain range covering a significant portion of the province. Mount Kahuzi, standing at 3,308 meters above sea level, is the highest peak in South Kivu.<ref name=":9" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The province also encompasses the Albertine Rift Valley, which includes the Ruzizi Plain, as well as Lakes Kivu and Tanganyika.<ref name=":9" /> In contrast, the western part of the province, particularly Shabunda Territory, consists of low-lying regions extending from the Maniema plateau, sloping gently toward the Congo River basin.<ref name=":9" />

Hydrology

The province is home to two major lakes: Lake Kivu and Lake Tanganyika. Lake Kivu, situated at an altitude of 1,470 meters, is one of the deepest lakes in Africa.<ref name=":9" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> However, its ichthyofaunal biodiversity remains comparatively constrained due to the pervasive presence of dissolved carbon dioxide and methane gas.<ref name=":9" /> In contrast, Lake Tanganyika, which reaches a depth of 773 meters, is rich in fish and supports fishing activities in the region. It is also the second deepest in the world after Russia's Lake Baikal. These two lakes are connected by the Ruzizi River, which runs along the province's eastern border.<ref name=":9" /> Other significant rivers include the Elila and Ulindi Rivers,<ref name=":5" /> with many originating from the eastern mountain ranges before draining westward into the Lualaba River. Most of the province's rivers belong to the Congo River Basin, although some flow directly into its lakes.<ref name=":9" /> Lake Kivu contains an estimated 45 billion cubic meters of dissolved methane gas in its deep waters, presenting both an energy resource and a potential environmental hazard.<ref name=":5" />

The province hosts four hydroelectric power stations, such as Ruzizi I, Ruzizi II, Kyimbi (Bendera), and Mungombe, while the Magembe micro-power plant in Fizi Territory remains inoperative.<ref name=":5" /> South Kivu is also endowed with considerable petroleum reserves, with oil deposits identified along the western littoral of Lake Kivu, within its subaqueous substratum, and across the Ruzizi Plain and Lake Tanganyika.<ref name=":5" /> Ongoing exploratory endeavors are being undertaken in Katanga, particularly at the confluence of the Mutambala River in Baraka, alongside similar research in Karamba, near the Nemba River, where bituminous hydrocarbon residues containing an 80% carbon composition have been extracted since 2020.<ref name=":5" /> Peat deposits are similarly exploited in multiple locales, including Kakonda (Kabare Territory) and Nyangezi, Chiherano, and Kachandja (Walungu Territory).<ref name=":5" />

The province is prone to seasonal flooding, particularly during the rainy season, which frequently disrupts infrastructure and settlements.<ref name=":222">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":24">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":92">Template:Cite web</ref>

Relief and geology

South Kivu's topography varied, with the eastern region dominated by the Mitumba mountain range, which often rises above 3,000 meters in elevation.<ref name=":7">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The central and western parts of the province are marked by high and low plateaus, respectively.<ref name=":7" /> The eastern highlands form part of the Albertine Rift, a geological depression that includes both Lake Kivu and Lake Tanganyika.<ref name=":7" /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The province's geology is divided into three main groups: basement terrains, volcanic terrains, and cover terrains. The basement terrains, primarily found in the western and central parts of the province, date back to the Middle Carboniferous period.<ref name=":7" /> These areas, which make up more than 70% of the province, are rich in valuable minerals like cassiterite, gold, columbite-tantalite (coltan), and wolframite, which have been mined since the colonial era.<ref name=":7" /> Volcanic terrains near Bukavu are dominated by basaltic rocks and ancient lava flows, particularly in the National INERA-Mulungu region.<ref name=":7" />

Ruzizi River, July 2010

In addition to its volcanic terrain, South Kivu contains extensive sedimentary basins, such as the Lake Kivu and Ruzizi Plain Basin, which have accumulated mineral-rich deposits over time. These include valuable resources such as gold, columbite-tantalite, diamonds and wolframite as well as tin, monazite, limestone, cassiterite, methane gas and thermal waters.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":82">Template:Cite journal</ref> The province's soil composition varies by region: Kabare, Idjwi, and Walungu territories have predominantly clayey soils, though these are increasingly degraded due to erosion and overpopulation, leading to frequent land disputes and a decline in livestock farming.<ref name=":9" /> While Idjwi still retains fertile agricultural land, population pressures have made arable land scarce. Kalehe Territory has rich clay soils, benefiting from its proximity to forests and containing small gold deposits.<ref name=":9" /> In contrast, the territories of Shabunda, Mwenga, and Fizi have sandy soils that support agriculture while also holding significant mineral wealth, including tin, gold, cassiterite, and coltan. Uvira Territory features sandy soils ideal for rice and cotton cultivation, while its high plateaus provide favorable conditions for livestock farming due to their mild climate.<ref name=":9" />

Climate

Rice farming in the Ruzizi Plain

South Kivu's mountainous eastern region, including Bukavu, experiences a temperate climate with mild temperatures. The dry season lasts from June to September, with an average annual temperature of 19°C in Bukavu.<ref name=":7" /> Higher altitudes, such as the Minembwe, Mulenge, Kalonge, and Kahuzi-Biéga mountains, experience cooler temperatures. These areas support grassy mountain vegetation with distinct layers.<ref name=":7" /><ref name=":44">Template:Cite web</ref>

The central and western parts of the province, particularly Shabunda Territory and Mwenga Territory, have a tropical rainforest climate, characterized by dense equatorial forests and abundant rainfall throughout the year.<ref name=":7" /> The Ruzizi Plain, however, experiences a microclimate with a tropical climate and relatively low rainfall (approximately 1,000 mm per year). Kabare, Walungu, Kalehe, Idjwi, and Bukavu territories experience a distinct two-season cycle: a dry season lasting three months (June to September) and a rainy season lasting nine months.<ref name=":7" /> The dry season is marked by high temperatures and a scarcity of rainfall, particularly in marshy areas. However, deforestation, environmental degradation, and population growth are increasingly disrupting the rainfall patterns in these regions.<ref name=":7" /> Forested areas such as Fizi, Mwenga, and Shabunda, located near the equatorial forest, receive heavy rainfall year-round. Uvira, apart from its highlands, has also seen declining rainfall and rising temperatures due to population growth and environmental destruction.<ref name=":7" />

The region's vegetation is characterized by a grassy savannah with thorns and Myrtillocactus geometrizans, most notably in the Kahuzi-Biéga National Park.<ref name=":7" />

Administrative divisions

Approximate correspondence between historical and current province
Belgian Congo Republic of the Congo Zaïre Democratic Republic of the Congo
1908 1919 1932 1947 1963 1966 1971 1988 1997 2015
22 districts 4 provinces 6 provinces 6 provinces 21 provinces + capital 8 provinces + capitale 8 régions + capitale 11 provinces 11 provinces 26 provinces
Bas-Uele Orientale Stanleyville Orientale Uele Orientale Haut-Zaïre Orientale Bas-Uele
Haut-Uele Haut-Uele
Ituri Kibali-Ituri Ituri
Stanleyville Haut-Congo Tshopo
Aruwimi
Maniema Costermansville Kivu Maniema Kivu Maniema
Lowa
Kivu Nord-Kivu Nord-Kivu
Kivu-Central Sud-Kivu

South Kivu is administratively structured into a decentralized system that balances governance between the central government, provincial authorities, and localized territorial entities. The province is hierarchically divided into several administrative subdivisions, including territories, cities, communes, sectors, and chiefdoms.<ref name=":822">Template:Cite journal</ref> Both the province and decentralized territorial entities (Entités Territoriales Décentralisées; ETDs) possess legal personality, allowing them to manage economic, human, financial, and technical resources autonomously.<ref name=":822" />

Territories

Template:See alsoThe province is composed of eight territories,<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":13">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":14">Template:Cite web</ref> each governed by a Territorial Administrator, who is assisted by two Assistant Territorial Administrators. These officials, appointed by the Ministry of the Interior and Security, are responsible for implementing state policies and overseeing governance in remote or rural areas.<ref name=":15">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":7" /> The province's administration is further supervised by the provincial governor, who acts as the President's representative in South Kivu.<ref name=":15" /><ref name=":7" /> The territories in South Kivu include:<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":13" /><ref name=":14" /><ref name=":45" />

Fizi Territory
Idjwi Territory
Kabare Territory
Kalehe Territory
Mwenga Territory
Shabunda Territory
Uvira Territory
Walungu Territory

Cities

Template:See also South Kivu has four officially recognized cities: Bukavu, Uvira, Baraka, and Kamituga.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":8" /> Each city functions as a decentralized administrative entity with legal status and is led by a mayor and a deputy mayor, both appointed by presidential decree, following recommendations from the Minister of the Interior and Security.<ref name=":822" />

Cities Details
Bukavu As the provincial capital and established in 1901, it was designated an urban district in 1925 and granted city status in 1958.<ref name=":17">Template:Cite web</ref> The city is divided into three communes: Bagira, Ibanda, and Kadutu, comprising 20 quarters and more than 400 avenues.<ref name=":17" />

As the economic center of South Kivu, Bukavu's economy is primarily driven by the informal sector and small and medium-sized enterprises.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":23">Template:Cite web</ref> Key industries include quinine production by Pharmakina, beverage manufacturing by Bralima, and mattress production by GINKI.<ref name=":23" /> Additional small-scale industries produce shoes, plastic containers, wood products, and artisanal soap. The city also hosts financial institutions, banks, and money transfer agencies.<ref name=":23" /> Notably, CJX Minerals Mining, a private Congolese company founded in 2014, is the leading exporter of 3T minerals (tin, tantalum, tungsten, and gold) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Uvira Historically the administrative center of Uvira Territory since 25 February 1938,<ref name=":52">Template:Cite web</ref> gained city status through a 2013 Prime Ministerial decree,<ref name=":52" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> which was formally ratified by President Joseph Kabila on 27 December 2018.<ref name=":102">Template:Cite web</ref> The city's status was reinforced by Decree No. 13/029 on 13 June 2019, officially recognizing it as the second city of South Kivu after Bukavu.<ref name=":16">Template:Cite web</ref> Uvira comprises three communes: Kalundu, Mulongwe, and Kagando.<ref name=":102" /><ref name=":16" />

The city's economy is largely based on subsistence agriculture, with family-based farming serving as a primary means of livelihood.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":022">Template:Cite web</ref> Uvira is home to the Nabahya Food Institute and an International Institute of Tropical Agriculture research station, both of which contribute to agricultural development.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Due to Uvira's proximity to Lake Tanganyika, one of the world's deepest lakes, fishing is a key economic activity, providing employment for approximately 1% of the local population.<ref name=":112">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":12">Template:Cite web</ref> Additionally, livestock breeding and poultry farming are widespread among residents.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":83">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":522">Template:Cite web</ref>

Baraka Situated west of the Ubwari Peninsula on the west side of Lake Tanganyika, Baraka was granted city status on 10 February 2010, and officially recognized in 2018 through Presidential Decree No. 13/29 of 13 June 2018.<ref name=":25">Template:Cite web</ref> It is the third-largest city in South Kivu and serves as the socio-economic hub of Fizi Territory.<ref name=":25" /> Baraka is divided into three communes: Baraka (center), Katanga, and Kalundja. Its economy plays a crucial role in the financial and commercial activities of Fizi.<ref name=":25" />
Kamituga Founded in 1923 by the Compagnie Minière des Grands-Lacs (MGL), Kamituga's development was driven by its role as a mining center. The city was granted official status through Decrees No. 13/029 and 13/030 of 13 June 2013, which elevated multiple agglomerations to city and municipal status.<ref name=":8" /> However, the implementation of these decrees was suspended in 2015, reducing the number of recognized cities. Kamituga's city status was later reaffirmed in December 2018, making it the 36th city in the DRC.<ref name=":8" />

As the administrative center of Mwenga Territory, Kamituga's growth was historically tied to the exploitation of gold-bearing gravels from the Elila River Basin.<ref name=":8" /> Mining activities were initially managed by MGL, which merged with KIVUMINES, PHIBRAKI, and COBELMIN in 1969.<ref name=":26">Template:Cite web</ref> In 1976, the company further merged with SYMETAIN to form Société Minière et Industrielle du Kivu (SOMINKI).<ref name=":26" /> The Congolese state held a 28% stake in SOMINKI, with the majority of shares controlled by the Empain Group.<ref name=":26" />

The process of granting city status began in 2009. On 9 June that year, the provincial governor submitted a proposal to the Provincial Assembly requesting the elevation of several agglomerations to the rank of ville (city) and commune (municipality).<ref name=":42">Template:Cite web</ref> The Provincial Assembly approved this request through Decision No. 09/200/PLENIERE/ASPRO/SK of 7 October 2009. These proposals were partly enacted in subsequent legislation, notably Decree No. 012/14 of 18 February 2012, and later consolidated through Decree No. 13/029 of 13 June 2013, which, in its Article 1, elevated Kamituga, Shabunda, Uvira, and Baraka to the rank of cities.<ref name=":42" /> However, in July 2015, the Council of Ministers suspended the execution of these decrees.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On 27 December 2018, President Joseph Kabila confirmed by presidential decree the status of Uvira, Baraka, and Kamituga as cities of South Kivu, joining the provincial capital, Bukavu.<ref name=":292">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":302">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A 13 June 2019 decree later reinforced the administrative framework for these urban entities.<ref name=":162">Template:Cite web</ref>

Chiefdoms and sectors

Template:See also Traditional governance structures remain significant in the province, particularly through chiefdoms and sectors.<ref name=":223">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":27">Template:Cite book</ref> These entities reflect historical systems of local rule, where authority is often hereditary and determined by ethnic customs before being formally integrated into the state governance framework.<ref name=":223" /><ref name=":27" /> The head of a chiefdom holds the title of mwami (paramount customary chief), with governance responsibilities extending to groupements, which are led by customary chiefs (chefs de groupement). Groupements are further divided into localités (villages or localities), also governed by customary chiefs.<ref name=":223" /><ref name=":27" /> The province includes 18 chiefdoms, five sectors, 185 groupements, and 2,428 localités.<ref name=":4823">Template:Cite web</ref>

Territory Chiefdoms and sectors<ref name=":45" />
Fizi Territory Lulenge Sector
Mutambala Sector
Ngandja Sector
Tanganyika Sector
Idjwi Territory Rubenga Chiefdom
Ntambuka Chiefdom
Kabare Territory Kabare Chiefdom
Nindja Chiefdom
Kalehe Territory Buhavu Chiefdom
Buloho Chiefdom
Mwenga Territory Wamuzimu Chiefdom
Itombwe Sector
Lwindi Chiefdom
Burhinyi Chiefdom
Basile Chiefdom
Luhwindja Chiefdom
Shabunda Territory Bakisi Chiefdom
Wakabango Chiefdom
Uvira Territory Bafuliiru Chiefdom
Bavira Chiefdom
Ruzizi Plain Chiefdom
Walungu Territory Ngweshe Chiefdom
Kaziba Chiefdom

Demographics

By 2024, South Kivu's population was estimated at approximately 8,147,400, nearly double the 2007 figure of 4,451,663.<ref name=":46" /> Population density remains highly uneven, with densely populated highland regions contrasting with sparsely inhabited forested lowlands.<ref name=":47">Template:Cite web</ref> In 2007, Kabare, Walungu, Idjwi, and Kalehe Territories, which together accounted for only 15% of the province's total area, contained 38.61% of its population, whereas the more extensive territories of Shabunda, Mwenga, and Fizi, covering 78.08% of the landmass, were home to just 38.12% of residents.<ref name=":47" /> Approximately 86.9% of South Kivu's population lived in rural areas at that time. Population concentrations are greatest in the mountainous northern regions, whereas the southern lowland and forest zones remain relatively underpopulated.<ref name=":47" />

Ethnic composition

Template:Multiple image The population is ethnically and linguistically diverse, with most of the population belonging to Bantu-speaking groups. According to Congolese scholar Safanto Lukendo Bulongo, the province's inhabitants can broadly be categorized into two prominent socio-political families, the first of which consists of interlacustrine pastoral Bantu groups characterized by centralized political systems governed by hierarchical chieftaincies that control land and people.<ref name=":47" /> The second group includes non-centralized Bantu societies, organized into smaller, autonomous kinship-based groups.<ref name=":47" /> The province's main ethnic groups include the Bashi (Shi), Bahavu, Bafuliiru, Bavira, Babembe, Barega, as well as Banyindu, Babwari, Babuyu (Buye), Batembo, Basanze (Bajoba), Bakwami, Basongora, Barongeronge, Baholoholo, Baswaga, Banyanga, and Bazimba, among others, alongside various Pygmy ethnic groups.<ref name=":48">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":33" /><ref name=":34" /><ref name=":35" /><ref name=":36" /> These populations are often organized around notions of autochthony, which is a sense of indigeneity profoundly tied to ancestral land and lineage, while non-indigenous communities, such as the Banyamulenge (Tutsi) and Barundi (Hutu), have also long been present.<ref name=":48" /><ref name=":44" />

Ethno-geographical distribution varies by territory, with the Bahavu predominantly inhabiting Kalehe and Idjwi; the Bashi residing in Kabare and Walungu; the Bafuliiru and Bavira in Uvira, where the Barundi are also found, particularly in the Ruzizi Plain; the Babembe primarily occupy Fizi, which also hosts the Banyamulenge pastoralists of Rwandan Tutsi origin settled in the Mulenge highlands; and the Barega mainly reside in Mwenga and Shabunda.<ref name=":44" /> The Bashi are the province's most dominant group, and for administrative and political purposes, South Kivu's communities are often categorized into two broad groups: the "large family", dominated by Bashi, and the "small family", which includes the Balega and various other minority groups.<ref name=":48" />

Languages and health

The official language is French, used in administration, education, and formal communication, while the dominant national language is Swahili, which serves as a lingua franca across the province and facilitates interethnic communication.<ref name=":47" /> Numerous vernacular languages are also spoken at the local level:<ref name=":47" />

Territory Vernacular languages
Fizi Kibembe, Kizoba, Kibwari, Masanze, Kibuyu, Kinyindu, Kinyarwanda
Idjwi Kihavu, Kinyarwanda, Kimbuti
Kabare Mashi, Kitembo, Kirega, Kimbuti
Kalehe Kitembo, Kimbuti, Kihavu, Kirongeronge, Mashi, Kinyarwanda
Mwenga Kirega, Kibembe, Kinyindu, Mashi, Kinyarwanda
Shabunda Kirega, Kitembo, Kikwami, Kisongola, Kizimba
Uvira Kivira, Kifuliiru, Kinyarwanda, Kirundi, Kizoba, Kinyindu, Kibembe
Walungu Mashi, Kirega, Kifuliiru

Administratively, South Kivu's healthcare system is organized into 34 health zones (zones de santé), which are grouped into five health districts (districts sanitaires).<ref name=":49">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

No. Zone de Santé (Health Zone) Notes
1 Fizi Fizi Territory
2 Kalole Fizi Territory
3 Nundu Fizi Territory
4 Minembwe Hauts-Plateaux of Fizi
5 Itombwe Mwenga Territory
6 Kimbi Lulenge Mwenga Territory
7 Mwenga Central Mwenga Territory
8 Kamituga Kamituga city
9 Kitutu Shabunda Territory
10 Lulingu Shabunda Territory
11 Shabunda Central Shabunda Territory
12 Mulungu Shabunda Territory
13 Kalehe Central Kalehe Territory
14 Bunyakiri Kalehe Territory
15 Minova Kalehe/border with North Kivu
16 Katana Kabare Territory
17 Miti-Murhesa Kabare Territory
18 Kabare Central Kabare Territory
19 Kaziba Walungu Territory
20 Kaniola Walungu Territory
21 Nyantende Walungu Territory
22 Walungu Central Walungu Territory
23 Ruzizi Uvira Territory lowlands
24 Lemera Uvira Territory
25 Uvira Uvira city
26 Hauts-Plateaux Uvira Territory highlands
27 Mwana Uvira Territory (mountain area)
28 Mubumbano Uvira Territory
29 Bagira Bukavu city
30 Ibanda Bukavu city
31 Idjwi Idjwi Territory
32 Nyangezi Walungu Territory
33 Kalonge Kalehe highlands
34 Kabiza

Migration

Template:Multiple image

The province's geographical position, situated along international borders with Rwanda, Burundi, and Tanzania, has made it a natural destination for cross-border migration.<ref name=":47" /> The province is home to many immigrants and refugees who are fleeing regional conflicts or seeking economic opportunities. Internal migration is also widespread, driven by artisanal and industrial mining, especially in gold-rich regions, land shortages in densely populated highlands, insecurity stemming from ongoing armed conflicts, and rural-to-urban migration as people seek improved living standards.<ref name=":47" /> A data collection exercise conducted by the Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), in partnership with the Réseau d'Action pour le Développement et le Progrès Intégré (RADPI) and the Division Provinciale des Affaires Humanitaires (DIVAH) of South Kivu, from 1 to 31 July 2022, recorded 1,288,574 internally displaced persons (IDPs) across South Kivu.<ref name=":49" /> They were identified in 34 health zones and 5,260 villages. The assessment also reported 802,535 returnees, 31,004 IDPs living in spontaneous sites, 64% of IDPs being women and children, and 16% of the provincial population affected by displacement, with 82% coverage of the province.<ref name=":49" /> IDPs were largely concentrated in Kalehe, Kabare, Walungu, Uvira, and Fizi Territories, where some zones hosted more than 53,600 displaced people, while returnees were mainly found in Kalehe, Shabunda, and Fizi, reaching up to 71,500 per health zone.<ref name=":49" />

History

Template:Multiple image

Before gaining political status in the 19th century, the region was inhabited by various Bantu-speaking ethnic groups, including the Bamushi, Bafuliiru, Bahavu, Banyindu,<ref name=":28" /><ref name=":29" /><ref name=":123" /> Babembe, Babuyu, Balega, Babwari,<ref name=":30" /><ref name=":02" /><ref name=":31" /> Baholoholo, Banyanga, Bavira, Bakusu, Batembo, Barongeronge, and Baswaga, along with Pygmy communities.<ref name=":33" /><ref name=":34" /><ref name=":35" /><ref name=":36" /> In the late 19th century, the Banyarwanda, whose ancestors had fled Rwanda after falling out with the ruling Nyiginya dynasty, settled in the Itombwe area.<ref name=":84">Template:Cite web</ref> Around the same period, Barundi migrants, primarily of Bahutu origin, established communities in the Ruzizi Plain, initially settling between Luvungi and Kiliba before gradually expanding northward toward Kamanyola.<ref name=":93">Template:Cite book</ref> Meanwhile, during the scramble for Africa, European explorers were primarily focused on locating the source of the Nile, a mystery that had long intrigued European geographers.<ref name=":40" /> Initially, the Ruzizi River was mistakenly believed to be the Nile's source, as it was thought to drain the waters of Lake Tanganyika toward the north. However, further expeditions later confirmed that the Ruzizi River was a tributary of Lake Tanganyika rather than its emissary.<ref name=":40" /> The territorial boundaries of what would later become South Kivu were first delineated during the Berlin Conference of 1885, where European powers formalized their claims over African territories. The northeastern boundary of the Congo Free State was established as "a straight line coming from the northern end of Lake Tanganyika and ending at a point located on the 30th east meridian and at 1° 20' south latitude; further north, the border is formed by the 30th meridian east".<ref name=":11" /> Under this arrangement, all of Lake Kivu and both banks of the Ruzizi River were incorporated into the Congo Free State.<ref name=":11" /> The name "Kivu" gained prominence after explorer David Livingstone encountered it during his travels to Uvira in 1867 and learned the term from local inhabitants.<ref name=":40" />

On 3 September 1886, Administrator General Camille Janssen issued a decree establishing nine districts within the colony, including Stanley Falls District, each governed by a district commissioner.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> As a result of this administrative restructuring, a territory known as Ruzizi-Kivu was integrated into Stanley Falls District.<ref name=":40" /> On 15 July 1898, a new decree renamed Stanley Falls District as Orientale Province, with Stanleyville (now Kisangani) as its capital.<ref name=":122">Template:Cite book</ref>

Template:Multiple images

In June 1909, the region became the site of the Kivu Frontier Incident when John Methuen Coote, a British officer from the Uganda Protectorate, established fortified camps at Burungu and Rubona on Lake Kivu.<ref name=":11" /> British troops under Coote withdrew from Rubona on 29 June 1909, allowing Belgian forces to take control of the post.<ref name=":37" /> The dispute was later resolved in May 1910, when the colonial boundaries between the Belgian Congo, the Uganda Protectorate, and German East Africa (now Rwanda) were officially settled, with eastern Kivu allocated to Uganda and Rwanda.<ref name=":38" /> Kivu District was formally created on 28 March 1912, through a royal decree that restructured the Congo into 22 districts.<ref name=":39" /><ref name=":40" /> The newly established Kivu District was subdivided into three sectors: Lake Edward (with Beni as its administrative center), Tanganyika (Uvira), and Rutshuru (Rutshuru).<ref name=":40" /> In 1923, during a visit to Bukavu, the Commissioner of Orientale Province received a request from the European settler community to transfer the district capital from Rutshuru to Bukavu, citing its central location, mild climate, and scenic setting on Lake Kivu as making it a more suitable administrative center.<ref name=":4822">Template:Cite web</ref> The transfer was approved in 1924, officially designating Bukavu as the headquarters of the Kivu District. From 1925 onward, the area experienced economic and infrastructural growth, marked by the arrival of Prince Eugène de Ligne and his wife from Usumbura (now Bujumbura), who established the Linéa Company on the Idjwi archipelago that same year. According to Colonel Xavier Diericx, significant progress was recorded in Kivu from 1927.<ref name=":4822" />

In 1933, the provinces of the Belgian Congo underwent reorganization, reducing their autonomy. The newly defined provinces were renamed after their capitals, leading to the division of Orientale Province into Stanleyville Province and Costermansville Province.<ref name=":41">Template:Cite journal</ref> Costermansville Province was renamed Kivu Province in 1947,<ref name=":41" /> and in 1951, the Kivu District was further subdivided into Sud-Kivu, Nord-Kivu, and Maniema Districts within Kivu Province.<ref name=":40" /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The law of 27 April 1962, led to the restructuring of provinces, institutionalizing Kivu Province as an official province alongside Maniema and North Kivu.<ref name=":40" /> Until 1962, the province was composed of three districts. A subsequent administrative reorganization in 1963 resulted in the creation of Central Kivu Province, which included the territories of Bukavu, Kabare, Kalehe, Goma, Fizi, Rutshuru, Shabunda, and Uvira.<ref name=":40" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Between 1967 and 1986, much of the southern region of South Kivu was dominated by the Maquis of Fizi, an independent socialist state under the leadership of Laurent-Désiré Kabila. The Maquis de Fizi was the best-organized and most enduring opposition, resistance, and confrontation structure against the dictatorial government of Mobutu Sese Seko in Zaire. Only after the defeats in the Moba Wars was the Maquis of Fizi dissolved.<ref name="Cosma">Template:Cite book</ref>

The modern South Kivu Province was formally established in 1988 with the enactment of Ordinance-Law No. 88-031 of 20 July 1988, which amended Ordinance-Law No. 82-006 of 25 February 1982 concerning the territorial, political, and administrative organization of the Republic of Zaire.<ref name=":4822" /> Since its creation, South Kivu has maintained Bukavu as its capital and administrative hub.<ref name=":4822" />

Conflict and insecurity

First Congo War

Template:See also During the First Congo War (1996–1997), South Kivu became one of the most severely impacted regions.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=":4">Template:Cite web</ref> The war was rooted in the aftermath of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, which saw the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), under Paul Kagame's leadership, depose President Juvénal Habyarimana's Hutu-led government and assume control of Rwanda.<ref name=":224">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":54">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":55">Template:Cite web</ref> In the genocide's wake, nearly two million Rwandan Hutu refugees, including former members of the Rwandan Armed Forces (Forces armées rwandaises; FAR) and the Interahamwe militia, fled into eastern Zaire, particularly to North and South Kivu.<ref name=":232">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":56">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Their arrival brought armed elements into the region, which the Zairean government, led by President Mobutu Sese Seko, was largely unable to contain or mitigate through either humanitarian or security measures.<ref name=":2222">Template:Cite web</ref> During this period, the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA), the military wing of the RPF, launched incursions into eastern Zaire aimed at dismantling Hutu insurgent networks operating from within refugee camps. These operations, however, extended beyond combatants and resulted in widespread violence against Hutu civilians.<ref name=":224" /><ref name=":54" /><ref name=":55" /> Independent assessments, including a report by United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) consultant Robert Gersony, estimated that between 5,000 and 10,000 people were killed monthly in mid-1994 as a consequence of these military actions.<ref name=":232" /><ref name=":56" /> Reports indicate that RPA units frequently used deceptive tactics, such as convening civilians for purported "peace and reconciliation" meetings, only to carry out mass executions.<ref name=":232" /><ref name=":56" /> One such incident occurred on 11 April 1995, when approximately fifty RPA soldiers attacked the Birava camp in Kabare Territory with heavy weaponry, reportedly killing around thirty people and injuring an unknown number of others.<ref name=":57">Template:Cite web</ref> Notably, neither the ex-FAR/Interahamwe nor the refugee population mounted a counterattack. Following the assault, survivors were relocated to the Chimanga and Kashusha camps.<ref name=":57" />

By 1996, a coalition comprising the RPA, Ugandan military forces, and the Burundian Forces Armées Burundaises (FAB) began providing military and logistical support to Tutsi communities in eastern Zaire, notably the Banyamulenge.<ref name=":2222" /> Legal and political scholar Filip Reyntjens describes the First Congo War as the intersection of two overlapping agendas: on one hand, a legitimate defense movement by Congolese Tutsi populations fearing retaliation, and on the other, the strategic use of this rebellion by the Rwandan government to secure political and military influence within Zaire.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In April 1996, Banyamulenge armed units originating from Burundi reportedly killed between eight and ten Burundian and Rwandan refugees at the Runingu camp. The assailants subsequently advanced toward the Hauts Plateaux and Moyens Plateaux.<ref name=":57" /> On 12 September 1996, Banyamulenge forces killed nine civilians in the villages of Kanyura and Makutano, located in the Itombwe sector of Mwenga Territory.<ref name=":523">Template:Cite web</ref> Among the victims were the chef de poste d'encadrement from the Rega ethnic group, his associates, and the chief of the Basimunyaka-Sud groupement, an ethnic Bembe from Fizi Territory, along with two members of his family. The massacre was perceived by many in the Bembe community as the beginning of an all-out assault against them.<ref name=":523" />

Uvira Territory

The Lemera Hospital, where the Lemera massacre took place

Additional violence erupted on 6 October 1996 in Kidoti, where Banyamulenge forces killed more than fifty civilians. Victims either died from shrapnel wounds or were executed, with some reportedly forced to dig their own mass graves.<ref name=":523" /> On the same day, in Lemera, Banyamulenge armed units carried out a massacre at the Lemera Hospital, killing 37 individuals, including two medical personnel, civilians, and soldiers of the Zairean Armed Forces (Forces Armées Zaïroises; FAZ) who were receiving treatment. The hospital was looted before the attackers withdrew.<ref name=":523" />

On 18 October, the Alliance of Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Congo (Alliance des Forces Démocratiques pour la Libération du Congo, AFDL) was established under the leadership of Laurent-Désiré Kabila, with military backing from the RPA and FAB. At the time, the UNHCR estimated that Uvira Territory hosted approximately 219,466 refugees, two-thirds of whom were Burundian nationals.<ref name=":310">Template:Cite web</ref> These individuals were dispersed across eleven camps along the Ruzizi River, leaving them highly exposed to armed attacks.<ref name=":310" /> On the same day as the AFDL's formation, AFDL and RPA units launched a coordinated military offensive, resulting in the deaths of at least 88 civilians in Kiliba, 15 of whom were later buried in Uvira.<ref name=":523" /> Additional atrocities were committed in Bwegera, where at least 51 civilians were executed by AFDL-RPA forces, prompting the International Committee of the Red Cross to organize mass burials.<ref name=":523" /> Two days later, on 20 October, AFDL, RPA, and FAB troops carried out simultaneous attacks on multiple refugee camps across Uvira Territory. At the Itara I and II camps near Luvungi, an estimated 100 Burundian and Rwandan refugees were killed. In Katala village, soldiers executed refugees attempting to flee, forcing residents to bury their bodies in mass graves.<ref name=":310" /> That same day, at the Kanganiro camp in Luvungi, the combined forces attacked with heavy weaponry, killing an unknown number of refugees, including approximately twenty patients in the camp's hospital. Other killings were reported in Luvingi, where soldiers murdered refugees who had sought shelter in the homes of Zairean civilians.<ref name=":310" />

Template:Multiple image

In Rubenga village, AFDL–RPA–FAB units killed an unspecified number of refugees and Zairean civilians fleeing toward Burundi, disposing of the bodies in the Ruzizi River. On 21 October, atrocities continued with attacks on Lubarika camp and village, resulting in the deaths of numerous Rwandan and Burundian refugees as well as Zairean civilians.<ref name=":310" /> Witnesses reported that the soldiers forced villagers to dig four large mass graves for the victims. In Kakumbukumbu, five kilometers from Lubarika, soldiers burned thirty refugees alive inside a house.<ref name=":310" /> The same day, the Luberizi camp, situated between Luberizi and Mutarule, was attacked with heavy weapons, leaving approximately 370 refugees dead. Soldiers threw bodies into pit latrines and killed several dozen additional civilians in the surrounding villages. More than sixty corpses were later discovered in nearby dwellings.<ref name=":310" /> On 24 October, the combined forces struck the Kagunga camp, killing an undetermined number of refugees. Witnesses reported seeing at least eight bodies, while additional killings occurred at Hongero village, one kilometer away, where soldiers targeted refugees fleeing alongside local Zaireans.<ref name=":310" /> During the night of 24–25 October 1996, the AFDL, RPA, and FAB captured the city of Uvira, effectively defeating FAZ throughout Uvira Territory. The fall of Uvira triggered a mass exodus of refugees, Burundians and Rwandans, who fled in multiple directions. Some escaped southward toward Fizi Territory, continuing into North Katanga, Tanzania, and Zambia, while others fled north through the Kabare and Walungu Territories.<ref name=":310" /> Many Burundian refugees attempted to return to their home country via the Ruzizi River, but were intercepted at Kiliba, where AFDL–RPA–FAB units reportedly executed refugees at the Kiliba Sugar Refinery and surrounding villages, including Ndunda, Ngendo, and Mwaba.<ref name=":310" /> On 25 October, soldiers killed an unknown number of refugees who had sought refuge inside abandoned dwellings in sectors 3 and 4 of the refinery complex.<ref name=":310" />

Between 1–2 November, approximately 250 civilians, including over 200 refugees and around 30 Zaireans, were indiscriminately killed in Ndunda, a village near the Burundian border. Refugees had taken shelter there, hoping to be protected by the CNDD-FDD (National Council for the Defense of Democracy–Forces for the Defense of Democracy) militia, which was reportedly present in the area.<ref name=":310" /> During the attack, several refugees drowned in the Ruzizi River while attempting to flee. Zairean civilians from the village were also killed, accused by the attacking forces of harboring or collaborating with CNDD-FDD fighters.<ref name=":310" /> On 24 November, in the village of Mwaba, AFDL–RPA–FAB units burned alive 24 Burundian Hutu refugees who had previously resided in the Biriba camp. After entering the village, soldiers detained people found on-site, later releasing the Zairean civilians but imprisoning the Burundian refugees inside a house, which was then set on fire.<ref name=":310" />

Mass killings under the guise of repatriation efforts (October–December 1996)

Template:Multiple image

In October 1996, AFDL–RPA–FAB joint units established a network of military checkpoints throughout the Ruzizi Plain and surrounding areas of Uvira and Fizi Territories. These checkpoints, strategically positioned in Bwegera, Sange, Luberizi, Kiliba, and at the entrances to Uvira, Makobola II, and the Rushima ravine, served as screening sites where civilians and refugees were intercepted under the pretext of repatriation.<ref name=":310" /> At these posts, soldiers reportedly separated people based on perceived nationality and ethnicity, identifying Rwandan and Burundian Hutus through indicators such as accent, physical appearance, and clothing. Those identified as Hutu were systematically executed on-site or in nearby areas.<ref name=":310" /> Numerous mass killings were carried out in this context, targeting refugees and local Zairean civilians accused of assisting them. One of the most documented atrocities happened on 22 October in the Rushima ravine, situated between Bwegera and Luberizi, when AFDL, RPA, and FAB units executed approximately 550 Rwandan Hutu refugees who had escaped from the Luberizi and Rwenena camps.<ref name=":310" /> Between 27 October and 1 November, other killings took place in the exact location, as additional groups of refugees, lured under the false promise of organized repatriation, were assembled and executed en masse.<ref name=":310" /> Subsequent massacres were recorded at Kahororo, near sector 7 of the Kiliba Sugar Refinery, where an undetermined number of refugees apprehended in surrounding villages were summarily executed. These events were part of a coordinated campaign to eliminate surviving Hutu refugee populations in the region.<ref name=":310" />

On 29 October, approximately 220 male refugees were executed near the church of the 8th Communauté des Églises de Pentecôte au Zaïre (CEPZA), now CEPAC (Communauté des Églises de Pentecôte en Afrique Centrale), in Luberizi. Witnesses reported that soldiers deceived the refugees into believing they were being processed for repatriation, only to separate the men from the women and children before executing them with gunfire and bayonets. Their bodies were buried in mass graves adjacent to the church.<ref name=":310" /> On 3 November, 72 Rwandan refugees were burned alive by AFDL–RPA–FAB forces at the COTONCO headquarters near Bwegera, after being detained under similar pretexts.<ref name=":310" /> On 13 November, about 100 Burundian refugees were executed in the Ngendo village. On 8 December, in Rukogero, soldiers executed 13 male refugees from a group of approximately 200 to 300 people who had fled the Kibogoye camp. The women and girls were released, while the men and boys were killed and their bodies discarded into pit latrines near the 8th CEPZA church.<ref name=":310" /> Another massacre occurred on 12 December in the village of Ruzia, where 15 people, including refugees from the Luberizi–Mutarule camps and local Zairean civilians, were killed during a military sweep aimed at locating hidden refugees. Some victims were burned alive inside houses, while others were shot and buried in three mass graves.<ref name=":310" /> One of the most severe incidents took place on 22 December 1996 along the banks of the Ruzizi River, also in Ruzia, where joint AFDL–RPA–FAB forces killed at least 150 people, most of them refugees who had survived the Runingu camp attack. The victims were executed after being discovered in nearby forests, and their bodies were burned two days later. Some reports suggested that the total death toll could have reached 600.<ref name=":310" /> In May 1997, AFDL and RPA units opened fire on a civilian demonstration in Uvira, killing 126 people protesting the murder of eight civilians by members of the new AFDL security forces.<ref name=":523" /> Following the massacre, soldiers sealed off the area and buried most of the bodies in two mass graves located in the "Biens mal acquis" district, where the troops had established their headquarters. Over subsequent days, residents recovered and buried eight additional bodies.<ref name=":523" />

Atrocities in other territories (1996–1997)

Following their capture of Uvira Territory, AFDL–RPA–FAB forces advanced into Fizi Territory. In late October 1996, 27 civilians, including women and children, were killed in Mboko, the administrative center of the Tanganyika Sector. The victims, attempting to cross Lake Tanganyika by canoe to reach Tanzania, were shot or drowned during the assault.<ref name=":523" /> On 28 October, AFDL and RPA troops attacked Abala-Ngulube village, located between the Moyen Plateau and Haut Plateau near Minembwe, killing 101 civilians. The victims were members of the Bembe ethnic group and adherents of the Third Malikia wa Ubembe Church, who had taken refuge inside their church building.<ref name=":523" /> Many were burned alive when the soldiers set the structure on fire. The attack was reportedly carried out in retaliation for an ambush by Bembe armed groups, which had killed two AFDL–RPA soldiers in the same area days earlier.<ref name=":523" />

Template:Multiple image

During 1996, Walungu Territory hosted part of a vast refugee settlement system known as the "Bukavu camps", which sheltered approximately 307,499 refugees, mostly Rwandan and Burundian nationals, across the Walungu, Kabare, and Kalehe Territories.<ref name=":311">Template:Cite web</ref> As AFDL–RPA forces advanced toward Bukavu, these camps became primary targets of military assaults.<ref name=":311" /> In mid-October 1996, AFDL–RPA troops killed at least 130 civilians in Kaziba Chiefdom, including 36 civilians executed on 16 October in the Kaziba commercial center. Their bodies were interred in a mass grave near the local Mennonite church.<ref name=":523" /> Subsequent attacks in the Namushuaga–Lukube area involved the killing of additional civilians with spears and machetes, while at least 11 people were murdered in the Cihumba groupement, where displaced residents had sought refuge. The soldiers also looted hospitals, shops, and homes, and destroyed a small hydroelectric facility in the area.<ref name=":523" /> On 20 October, AFDL–RPA forces attacked the Kamanyola refugee camp, killing an undetermined number of refugees and Zairean civilians, whose bodies were thrown into pit latrines. The following day, on 21 October, AFDL–RPA units executed Rwandan and Burundian refugees at Nyarubale in the Kalunga hills as they fled toward Bukavu.<ref name=":311" /> Victims who failed Swahili language tests or were identified by Rwandan or Burundian accents were systematically executed. On 26 October, between 200 and 600 people, most of them women, children, and the elderly, were ambushed and killed between Nyantende and Walungu-Centre.<ref name=":311" /> Two days later, on 28 October, five refugees were executed by AFDL–RPA soldiers in Lwakabiri, west of Bukavu. After the fall of Bukavu on 29 October, the AFDL–RPA coalition continued targeting northern refugee camps, notably INERA-Kashusha.<ref name=":311" /> On 2 November, a large-scale assault on the INERA–Kashusha camp left hundreds of refugees dead. Later, on 22 November, AFDL–RPA forces massacred between 500 and 800 refugees at Chimanga camp, having deceived them with false promises of food and repatriation.<ref name=":311" />

Template:Multiple image

In early 1997, reports indicated continued torture and executions of refugees along the Bukavu–Walungu road, where individuals were arrested, beaten, and killed, often with knives or machetes.<ref name=":311" /> On 14 March 1997, AFDL and RPA units killed nine civilians, including a child, at the VIPAM project concession in Lwana, Kalehe Territory. The victims, laborers from Shabunda and Kabare Territories, were accused of aiding fleeing Hutu refugees. They were executed with knives and machetes.<ref name=":523" /> After Laurent-Désiré Kabila assumed power in May 1997 and renamed the country the Democratic Republic of the Congo, violence in the east persisted, culminating in a large-scale massacre in July 1997 carried out by soldiers of the newly formed Congolese Armed Forces (Forces Armées Congolaises; FAC), alongside RPA units, in the Kazumba, Talama, Mukungu, and Kabanga villages, located along the border between Katanga and South Kivu provinces.<ref name=":523" /> Between 500 and 800 people were killed over several days. The attacks were conducted in retaliation for an assault by the Jeshi la Jua militia ("Sun Army"), a local resistance group opposing the new government, which had earlier killed one FAC soldier. The reprisals indiscriminately targeted both combatants and civilians.<ref name=":523" /> Later that year, on the night of 22–23 December, FAC and RPA soldiers executed 22 civilians at the Bulambika commercial center in Bunyakiri, accusing them of supporting Mayi-Mayi, who had briefly occupied the area.<ref name=":523" />

Kalehe Territory

Following the fall of Bukavu and the subsequent destruction of the refugee camps north of the city, thousands of Rwandan and Burundian Hutu refugees fled northward toward North Kivu Province. Their movements primarily followed two routes: one passing through the Kahuzi-Biéga National Park en route to Bunyakiri and Hombo, and the other along the Goma road via Nyabibwe.<ref name=":59">Template:Cite web</ref> The routes soon became sites of large-scale killings as refugees who attempted to reach North Kivu via Nyabibwe were trapped between converging AFDL and RPA units advancing from Goma and Bukavu. By mid-November 1996, units of the ex-FAR/Interahamwe, retreating Rwandan Hutu combatants, allegedly killed an unknown number of refugees in Nyabibwe.<ref name=":59" /> Most of the victims were elderly, sick, or disabled persons who lacked the strength to continue fleeing. Eyewitness accounts reported that the attackers used rockets and incendiary weapons, setting ablaze the houses and vehicles in which refugees were confined, killing many by fire or explosions.<ref name=":59" /> Some testimonies suggested that certain refugees, fearing imminent capture and reprisal by AFDL–RPA forces, requested to be killed by the ex-FAR/Interahamwe rather than fall into enemy hands, though this claim could not be independently verified by the United Nations Mapping Report. The majority of the refugees who escaped from Nyabibwe moved toward Bunyakiri and Hombo through the Kalehe Territory's Hauts Plateaux, establishing temporary encampments at Shanje and Numbi.<ref name=":59" /> Pursued by AFDL and RPA troops, many were subsequently killed in Chebumba, Lumbishi, and other settlements across the territory. On 21 November 1996, AFDL–RPA units carried out one of the deadliest massacres in the region, killing several hundred refugees and injuring hundreds more in and around the Shanje makeshift camp and the adjacent Rukiga bamboo forest. Witnesses reported that refugees were killed by gunfire, rockets, and shrapnel, while others, particularly the elderly, children, and the infirm, were executed along the roadside as they attempted to flee.<ref name=":59" />

After the initial assault, soldiers ordered surviving refugees to assemble and march in a column, ostensibly for repatriation to Rwanda. Once they began moving, the troops opened fire on the column, killing many along the route. The following day, 22 November, AFDL–RPA soldiers attacked and killed an unknown number of survivors from the Shanje camp in Lumbishi.<ref name=":59" /> The Rukiga bamboo forest became another site of mass killings as troops hunted down refugees attempting to escape through the terrain. Refugees who managed to flee from Shanje and Lumbishi continued toward Hombo, where they joined survivors from the INERA–Kashusha camp.<ref name=":59" /> Between 2–4 November, as refugees attempted to cross Kahuzi-Biéga National Park to reach North Kivu, AFDL–RPA forces reportedly ambushed and killed an undetermined number of them within the park boundaries. Due to restricted access and the remoteness of the area, the exact number of victims remains unknown.<ref name=":59" />

Shabunda Territory

Following the fall of Uvira and Bukavu, Shabunda Territory became a central transit zone for Rwandan and Burundian Hutu refugees fleeing northward through South Kivu's dense forests. Many survivors from the Uvira and Bukavu refugee camps attempted to escape via the old Bukavu–Kindu road, passing through Chimanga, Kigulube, Katshungu, and Shabunda.<ref name=":58">Template:Cite web</ref> By mid-December 1996, approximately 38,000 refugees were registered in three makeshift camps near Shabunda, Makese I, Makese II, and Kabakita (also referred to as Kabakita I, II, and III). An undetermined number of those who lagged or fell ill during the journey were killed by AFDL and RPA troops along the main routes of the territory.<ref name=":58" /> Between January and February 1997, numerous massacres were reported in Mukenge, Baliga, and Kigulube villages. Although sporadic clashes took place between AFDL–RPA forces, remnants of FAZ, and ex-FAR/Interahamwe units retreating westward, the majority of victims were unarmed refugees and local civilians.<ref name=":58" /> On 5 February, AFDL and RPA units reportedly killed around 500 refugees at the metal bridge over the Ulindi River. Most of the victims had fled the Kabakita camps as the soldiers approached.<ref name=":58" /> After the massacre, villagers were forced to dump the bodies into the river and clean the bridge. Survivors were taken toward Kabatika, where they were executed the following day. Refugees who escaped these attacks attempted to reach Kindu, while others, believing that the UNHCR had reopened operations at Kigulube, turned back toward Bukavu.<ref name=":58" /> Thousands of refugees traveled in small groups of 50 to 100 people, moving through the forests under extreme deprivation and exposure. By this time, AFDL–RPA forces controlled most of Shabunda Territory, having established a dense network of checkpoints along key routes.<ref name=":58" />

From February to April 1997, AFDL–RPA forces conducted a systematic campaign of extermination against refugees moving through the Kigulube–Shabunda axis, including along the 156-kilometre road linking the two towns. On 13 February, AFDL–RPA soldiers massacred between 70 and 180 refugees with machetes in Mpwe, near Kigulube. Refugees were assembled under the pretext of reconciliation efforts to "resolve the Hutu–Tutsi problem".<ref name=":58" /> Soldiers invited them to rest and eat before leading small groups into a house, where they were killed one by one. Those attempting to flee were shot. The victims were buried in a mass grave behind the house. Two days later, on 15 February, the same forces killed approximately 200 refugees at two locations, 4–7 kilometres from Kigulube. In one instance, around sixty refugees were locked inside a house that was then set on fire, their bodies later interred in mass graves.<ref name=":58" />

Between 30 March and early April, several hundred refugees were killed across Katshungu, Ivela, Balika, Lulingu, and Keisha, as well as at the Ulindi bridge, often in the presence of senior RPA officers. The victims, primarily women and children, were mainly survivors from the Chimanga camp who had sought refuge in Katshungu.<ref name=":58" /> Humanitarian organizations were barred from accessing the area for several days, but later reported cleanup operations and visible human remains scattered along the road.<ref name=":58" /> Between January and March, thousands of refugees died of hunger, exhaustion, and disease while attempting to cross the forests between Kigulube and Shabunda. Weak, malnourished, and disoriented, these groups received no humanitarian assistance, as aid agencies were prohibited from operating beyond a 30-kilometre radius of Bukavu.<ref name=":58" /> AFDL and RPA officials required that government "facilitators" accompany all humanitarian missions. These people were accused of providing military intelligence on the whereabouts of refugees, enabling soldiers to intercept and kill them before aid could reach them.<ref name=":58" /> During the same period, AFDL and RPA troops forbade Zairean civilians from assisting refugees and reportedly executed an unknown number of residents accused of helping displaced persons or collaborating with international NGOS and UN agencies. The total number of deaths from starvation, exhaustion, and killings is impossible to determine, though estimates suggest several hundred to several thousand victims.<ref name=":58" /> Between 26–29 April 1997, AFDL and RPA soldiers abducted, detained, and tortured approximately fifty Rwandan Hutu minors and nine adult refugees near Kavumu Airport. The victims had been taken from the Lwiro Processing Centre for child refugees.<ref name=":58" /> They were confined in a shipping container, where they were subjected to severe beatings and inhumane treatment. Soldiers also assaulted medical personnel at the Lwiro centre, accusing them of aiding refugees.<ref name=":58" /> On 29 April, following international pressure, the victims were released to the UNHCR, who documented their testimony. The survivors reported that soldiers were using multiple containers at the airport as makeshift detention and torture facilities for captured refugees.<ref name=":58" />

Second Congo War

Template:See also From late 1997 onwards, the relationship between President Laurent-Désiré Kabila, Rwanda and the Tutsi soldiers present in the AFDL deteriorated. Laurent-Désiré Kabila's government faced multiple accusations of marginalizing Tutsi political factions, excluding them from his administration, and displaying preferential treatment toward his Katanga clan.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref> In July 1998, driven by fears of a coup d'état, President Laurent-Désiré Kabila relieved Rwandan General James Kabarebe of his position as Chief of Staff of the AFDL, while also issuing an order for the Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA) soldiers to withdraw from Congolese territory.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite book</ref> In response, on 2 August 1998, a faction of Tutsi soldiers mutinied and, with the assistance of the AFDL, the Banyamulenge militias, the Ugandan army (Ugandan People's Defence Force; UPDF), and the Burundi army (Forces Armées Burundaises; FAB), launched a rebellion aimed at overthrowing President Laurent-Désiré Kabila.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":2">Template:Cite book</ref> Within a few weeks, this coalition formed the Rassemblement Congolais pour la Démocratie (RCD) and gained control over major urban centers in North and South Kivu, Orientale Province, North Katanga, and even managed to penetrate into the Équateur Province. The war resulted in wide-scale displacement, famine, and a staggering loss of lives. Numerous rebel groups and militias emerged, further intensifying the violence and leading to pervasive human rights violations, including large-scale massacres and incidents of sexual violence.<ref name=":2" /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On August 6, 1998, factions of the ANC/RPA/FAB perpetrated a massacre, claiming the lives of numerous civilians in Uvira, in South Kivu.<ref name="ReferenceB">Template:Cite web</ref> As civilians sought shelter or attempted to flee the combat zone, they fell victim to the FAC in confrontations, resulting in hundreds of fatalities. Moreover, on the same day, members of the ANC, the armed wing of the RCD rebel, killed 13 people, including the chief of the Kiringye area, in the village of Lwiburule in South Kivu.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> Another massacre unfolded as elements of the ANC/RPA claimed the lives of 15 individuals in the vicinity of Kivovo, Kigongo, and Kalungwe, all situated in South Kivu. The victims suffered from dagger wounds or were shot near the primary port in Kalundu and at the facilities of SEP Congo.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> On August 24, 1998, RCD forces and Rwandan soldiers unleashed a massacre in Kasika and neighboring villages in South Kivu, resulting in the deaths of more than 1,000 people, as reported by the United Nations Mapping Report.<ref name="ReferenceB"/><ref name=cas>Template:Cite web</ref> The majority of the recovered bodies, predominantly women and children, were discovered on the 60-kilometer journey from Kilungutwe village to Kasika.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Prior to their murders, the women were subjected to rape followed by brutal disembowelment using daggers.<ref name=cas /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> From December 30, 1998, to January 2, 1999, RCD forces committed another massacre, claiming the lives of over 800 civilians, primarily belonging to the Babembe community, in the small village of Makobola in South Kivu. Many victims endured machete attacks or were shot at close range, while others met their demise through burning or drowning in nearby rivers. Infants and young children were callously thrown into deep pit latrines, left to perish, while adults who dared to disobey orders and attempted to escape were met with bullets.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On May 14, 2000, members of the ANC conducted a massacre resulting in 300 deaths in the village of Katogota in South Kivu.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The war officially ended in 2003 with the signing of the Sun City Agreement, which aimed to establish a transitional government and promote peace and stability in the DRC. However, sporadic violence and conflicts in the region persisted even after the official end of the war.<ref name=":1" /> In an interview with Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need, in 2024, the Vicar Geneal of the Archdiocese of Bukavu, Floribert Bashimbe, lamented that "for 30 years, we have been in a cycle of violence and eternal new beginnings. One knows when the war starts, but not when it will end".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

War and human rights

The Banyamulenge, who actively aligned themselves with the AFDL and RCD factions throughout the duration of the Second Congo War, have been subject to widespread disdain among many Congolese due to their alleged involvement in a range of nefarious activities. These accusations include launching assaults on refugee camps and densely populated villages, engaging in civilian executions, and orchestrating acts of terrorism targeting Zairian civilians across various regions of South and North Kivu. Consequently, a considerable number of Congolese view the Banyamulenge as unwelcome intruders encroaching upon their native territories, thereby intensifying the deep-rooted animosity directed towards them.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Victims of sexual violence in the town Bunyakiri in the Kalehe Territory of the South Kivu Province, August 2010

The UN estimates that in 2005, approximately 45,000 women were raped in South Kivu.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It forms various armed groups, including the Rwandan-backed armed groups, Banyamulenge armed groups, Raia Mutomboki, Mai-Mai militias, ADF (Allied Democratic Forces) and FDLR. There have been numerous accounts and allegations of sexual violence perpetrated by members of the Congolese army (Forces Armées de la République Démocratique du Congo; FARDC) in eastern Congo. The 10th Military Region of the newly established Congolese military, led by General Pacifique Masunzu, whose undisciplined former factional soldiers are responsible for human rights violations due to a continuing culture of impunity for military personnel, compounded by challenging living conditions, inadequate remuneration, and insufficient training.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":4" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Masunzu is Munyamulenge (South Kivu Banyamulenge Tutsi) who broke with the Rwandan-backed Rally for Congolese Democracy (RCD) back in 2003. He was formerly commander of the 122nd Brigade in the Minembwe area, who in 2005 rebelled against the authorities in defence of the Congolese Banyamulenge, against harassment and physical abuse. Also previously former second in command of 4th Military Region in Kasai-Occidental. Africa Confidential said in 2011 that he 'clearly remains implacably opposed to the Rwandan government'.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> His deputy Colonel Baudouin Nakabaka is a former Mai-Mai fighter with close links to the FDLR. In July 2007, United Nations human rights expert Yakin Erturk called the situation in South Kivu the worst she has ever seen in four years as the global body's special investigator for violence against women. Sexual violence throughout Congo is "rampant," she said, blaming rebel groups, the armed forces and national police. Her statement included that "Frequently women are shot or stabbed in their genital organs, after they are raped. Women, who survived months of enslavement, told me that their tormentors had forced them to eat excrement or the human flesh of murdered relatives".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In June 2014, around 35 people were killed in an attack in the South Kivu village of Mutarule. The attack was apparently part of dispute over cattle.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

On 7 August 2015 the 2015 South Kivu earthquake, a magnitude 5.8 earthquake, struck Template:Convert north-northeast of Kabare at a depth of Template:Convert. One policeman was killed.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On 16 July 2020, the Ngumino and Twiganeho militias of the Banyamulenge community perpetrated the Kipupu massacre, which claimed the lives of 220 people in South Kivu village of Kipupu, as reported by provincial lawmakers.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Economy

Agriculture

Template:See alsoTemplate:Multiple image

Approximately 87% of the population depends on agriculture for their livelihoods, making farming the dominant economic activity and providing a substantial labor force for agricultural work. Women comprise a significant portion of this workforce.<ref name=":45">Template:Cite web</ref> In 2008, agriculture contributed about 63% of the province's gross domestic product (GDP), forming part of a broader 66% share for the primary sector, ahead of services (22%) and the tertiary sector (8%).<ref name=":5023">Template:Cite web</ref> South Kivu's fertile soils, particularly in the Fizi, Mwenga, Shabunda, and Uvira Territories, sustain a wide range of subsistence and cash crops. Food crops such as cassava, beans, sweet potato, maize, rice, bananas, tubers, various fruits, and vegetables are cultivated throughout the region, while industrial crops include coffee, tea, rubber, cinchona, cocoa, cotton, palm oil, sugar cane, tobacco, soybeans, sorghum, and pyrethrum.<ref name=":44" /><ref name=":503">Template:Cite web</ref> Cassava stands out as the dominant staple, cultivated by the majority of smallholder farmers.<ref name=":502">Template:Cite web</ref>

Historically, South Kivu was a major producer and exporter of agricultural products, including sugar, cotton, tea, cinchona, coffee, and livestock, as well as food crops such as bananas, potatoes, sorghum, and millet, which were supplied to other regions of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.<ref name=":5023" /> During the colonial and early post-independence eras, robusta and arabica coffee, tea, and cinchona formed the basis of a thriving plantation-based agricultural economy.<ref name=":44" /> However, this modern agricultural sector deteriorated following the Zairianization policies of the 1970s, leading to the mismanagement, abandonment, or conversion of plantations into subsistence plots, while many processing factories, such as those for coffee, tea, and palm oil, were closed, dismantled, or left inoperative due to neglect, insecurity, and poor maintenance.<ref name=":44" /><ref name=":43" />

Territory Chiefdom and sector Food crops Industrial crops
Kabare Kabare Banana, beans, vegetables, maize, sorghum, sweet potato, soybean, potato Arabica coffee, pyrethrum, cinchona, tea
Nindja Banana, beans, cassava, sweet potato, soybean, maize, sorghum, vegetables Arabica coffee, cinchona, tea
Kalehe Buhavu Groundnut, banana, beans, cassava, maize, rice, sweet potato Arabica coffee, Robusta coffee, cinchona, cotton
Buloho Groundnut, banana, beans, cassava, yam, maize, rice, sweet potato Palm oil, coffee, cotton
Fizi Lulenge Groundnut, banana, beans, maize, cassava, sweet potato, green peas, potato Palm oil, coffee, cotton
Mutambala Groundnut, banana, beans, maize, cassava Robusta coffee, cotton, tobacco, palm oil
Ngandja Groundnut, banana, beans, maize, cassava, paddy rice Palm oil, cotton
Tanganyika Cassava, maize, paddy rice Robusta coffee, cotton
Idjwi Ntambuka Groundnut, banana, beans, cassava, maize, soybean, sorghum, sweet potato Arabica coffee, cinchona
Rubenga Groundnut, banana, beans, cassava, maize, soybean, sorghum, sweet potato Arabica coffee, cinchona
Walungu Ngweshe Banana, maize, soybean, sorghum, beans, cassava, vegetables, sweet potato, potato Arabica coffee, cinchona, tea, cotton
Kaziba Banana, maize, soybean, sorghum, beans, cassava, vegetables, sweet potato, potato Arabica coffee, cinchona
Uvira Bafuliiru Groundnut, banana, maize, rice, cassava, vegetables, sweet potato, potato Robusta coffee, cotton, tobacco, palm oil, papaya
Bavira Groundnut, banana, maize, cassava, vegetables, potato Robusta coffee, cotton
Ruzizi Plain Groundnut, banana, maize, cassava Cotton, sugarcane, tobacco
Mwenga Basile Groundnut, banana, beans Robusta coffee, palm oil, cinchona
Burhinyi Banana, beans, cassava, sweet potato, potato, sorghum Robusta coffee, cinchona
Itombwe Banana, beans, maize, cassava, sweet potato Arabica coffee
Lwindi Banana, beans, maize, cassava, sweet potato, groundnut, potato Arabica coffee, palm oil
Luhwinja Banana, beans, maize, cassava, sweet potato, potato, sorghum Robusta coffee, cinchona
Wamuzimu Groundnut, banana, maize, cassava, rice Arabica coffee, cotton, palm oil
Shabunda Bakisi Groundnut, banana, maize, cassava, rice Palm oil
Wakabango Groundnut, banana, maize, cassava Arabica coffee, cotton, palm oil

Source: IPAPEL-South Kivu (2017)<ref name=":5022">Template:Cite web</ref>

Agriculture remains largely traditional and undercapitalized, with limited access to agricultural subsidies and credit facilities. Unlike regions such as the European Union, where programs like the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) provide substantial government assistance, farmers in South Kivu operate without any institutional financial support.<ref name=":50">Template:Cite web</ref> Farmers who resort to small loans, often obtained from local lenders, cooperatives, or village associations, incur additional financial costs, which are reflected in their agricultural income as interest expenses.<ref name=":50" /> In certain highland territories, farmers cultivating coffee and sugar cane are subject to a fixed local tax, administered through the chiefdom system, based on the number of fields under cultivation.<ref name=":50" /> According to agronomists, this measure, designed by local authorities to promote a shift toward food crop production deemed more beneficial to community food security than industrial crops, also includes the imposition of additional taxes on the sale of agricultural products.<ref name=":50" />

Template:Multiple image

Over 99% of farms in the province are small-scale, with an average landholding of just 0.42 hectares, ranging from 0.50 hectares in Kalehe Territory to a low of 0.20 hectares in Kabare Territory.<ref name=":502" /> Large-scale estates constitute less than 1% of total farms, though their average size exceeds 90 hectares, with estates in Kalehe Territory averaging over 126 hectares and those in Kabare Territory surpassing 75 hectares.<ref name=":502" /> Typically, farming households in the mountainous regions cultivate between 0.35 and 1 hectare, compared to the national average of 1 to 1.5 hectares per farm.<ref name=":5022" /> The limited landholdings in these areas are primarily attributed to population pressure and land appropriation by elites who sell plots illicitly. Much of the arable land is owned by a small elite group, including businesspeople, political figures, military officers, and other notables, who exploit landless peasants by compelling them to work on large plantations to meet their own food needs.<ref name=":5022" />

Land is acquired in South Kivu through various channels such as inheritance, renting, sharecropping, buying, and customary or state-endorsed donations. Farmers often acquire land through rental or sharecropping agreements made directly with landowners without state oversight, while inheritance, rooted in local customs, involves succession and formal recognition of heirs.<ref name=":50223">Template:Cite web</ref> Land can also be accessed via state concessions, which require the formal purchase and registration of property, or through customary allocations granted by traditional leaders. In mountainous areas, the Mwami allocates land to his subjects, while in forested regions, this role falls to the clan chief after family consultations.<ref name=":50223" /> Private land transactions can occur with or without official land titles. When state land is involved, the process must go through public administrative channels to legalize ownership, whereas private land may not require such formalities.<ref name=":50223" /> Among the customary systems, the Kalinzi allows the Mwami to allocate land as a symbolic gift or recognition, while the Bwasa serves as a localized form of tenancy widely used in Bushi. In Kabare Territory, many farmers have taken legal steps to protect their land rights by obtaining Land Titles or Customary Land Certificates (Certificat foncier coutumier) from the Mwami.<ref name=":50223" />

Livestock farming and fishing

Template:Multiple image

Livestock rearing is prevalent in the high plateaus of Kalehe, Kabare, and Walungu Territories, where farmers raise cattle, goats, pigs, rabbits, and poultry through both individual and collective practices.<ref name=":44" /><ref name=":43" /> The province features three central livestock systems: individual extensive farming, characterized by small household herds; collective extensive farming, involving pooled herds and shared infrastructure; and intensive small-scale rearing within household compounds.<ref name=":44" /> An example of such initiatives includes the Mulume Munene farm, which supports communal livestock management.<ref name=":44" /><ref name=":43" />

Most animals are managed under traditional, low-input conditions where they graze freely on communal pastures and feed on crop residues. Although these practices remain affordable for rural populations, they yield limited productivity due to inadequate nutrition, poor pasture maintenance, and soil nutrient depletion.<ref name=":51">Template:Cite journal</ref> Seasonal variations, especially during dry periods, worsen feed scarcity, particularly for ruminants. Studies have shown that the shortage of quality forage remains one of the major challenges hindering livestock productivity in eastern Congo, leading to low meat and milk output and higher prices for animal products.<ref name=":51" /> Nevertheless, livestock remains a strategic sector for economic revitalization in South Kivu, as it supports income diversification, dietary improvement, and food security in a national context characterized by very low consumption levels of animal products, averaging about 5.2 kilograms of beef, 0.6 kilograms of milk, and 0.1 kilograms of eggs per capita annually.<ref name=":51" />

Fishing in Lake Kivu, Lake Tanganyika, and the surrounding rivers provides food and income for local communities.<ref name=":44" /><ref name=":43" />

Mining and natural resources

South Kivu's mineral wealth includes gold, cassiterite, coltan (colombo-tantalite), wolframite, tin, monazite, iron ore, diamonds, amethyst, limestone, and methane gas.<ref name=":44" /><ref name=":43" /> However, most of the extraction is carried out through artisanal methods, often informally or illegally. Formal industrial mining and production are limited, with only a few formal companies such as SAKIMA (Société Aurifère du Kivu et du Maniema) and CIMENKI (Cimenterie du Kivu) involved.<ref name=":44" /><ref name=":43" /> The sector remains plagued by fraud, smuggling, and competition among foreign operators, while a persistent jurisdictional dispute between the national and provincial authorities undermines effective resource governance and equitable revenue distribution.<ref name=":44" /><ref name=":43" />

Industrial activity is underdeveloped. The province once hosted numerous manufacturing enterprises, including oil mills, sugar refineries, soap factories, beverage plants, and match factories, but most have ceased operations due to armed conflict, looting, infrastructure decay, insecurity, and declining global commodity prices.<ref name=":43" /> The few surviving industries are mainly limited to the processing of agricultural products, particularly coffee, tea, quinine, and sugar.<ref name=":43" /> However, microfinance remains a notable strength, with 22 banks actively offering credit that empowers local businesses and individuals to grow their incomes.<ref name=":432" />

Categories Annual budget South Kivu (2015) Ref.
CDF US Dollars ($) <ref name=":432">Template:Cite web</ref>
Own revenues 40,426,139,907 43,468,967.6 <ref name=":432" />
External revenues 4,905,947,560 5,275,212.43 <ref name=":432" />
Transfers receivable from central government (40%) 133,230,028,987 143,258,096 <ref name=":432" />
Total revenue 178,562,116,454 192,002,276 <ref name=":432" />

Expenditures

CDF US Dollars ($) % Ref.
Salaries of permanent staff 34,899,710,568 37,526,570.5 19.5 <ref name=":432" />
Staff benefits 10,812,100,970 11,625,915 6.1 <ref name=":432" />
Goods and materials 5,569,097,736 5,988,277.14 3.1 <ref name=":432" />
Equipment 11,110,082,408 11,936,647.8 6.2 <ref name=":432" />
Transfers and subsidies 34,744,916,754 37,360,126.5 19.5 <ref name=":432" />
Infrastructure (construction, rehabilitation, building additions, and real estate acquisition) 61,886,197,493 66,544,298.4 34.7 <ref name=":432" />
Domestic debt 2,601,702,096 2,797,529.14 1.5 <ref name=":432" />
Financial fees 272,125,719.6 292,705.075 0.2 <ref name=":432" />
Total expenditures 178,562,116,454 192,002,276 100 <ref name=":432" />

Tourism

Template:Multiple image

The province boasts remarkable ecotourism potential, as it is home to Kahuzi-Biéga National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, which spans across the territories of Kabare, Walungu, Kalehe, and Shabunda.<ref name=":44" /><ref name=":53">Template:Cite web</ref> The province also includes 13 protected areas featuring diverse mountain topography, endemic flora, and fauna, including the eastern lowland gorilla (also known as Grauer's gorilla).<ref name=":44" /> These natural assets, along with scenic sites such as Lake Kivu, Idjwi Island, and Itombwe Nature Reserve, make South Kivu one of the most ecologically and economically significant regions in eastern DRC.<ref name=":44" />

It also features key institutions dedicated to research and environmental preservation, notably the Social Sciences Research Center (Centre de Recherche en Sciences Sociales; CRSN), the Kanyegero ecovillage near Birava, the Lwiro Primate Rehabilitation Center (Centre de Réhabilitation des Primates de Lwiro; CRPL), the Centre de Recherche en Hydrobiologie, and INERA-Mulungu research center,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":53" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> along with geothermal springs distributed across Kabare, Walungu, Mwenga, Fizi, Shabunda, and Uvira Territories.<ref name=":53" />

Politics

Template:Multiple image

During Joseph Kabila's presidency (2001–2019), the province was dominated mainly by political figures affiliated with the People's Party for Reconstruction and Democracy (Parti du Peuple pour la Reconstruction et la Démocratie; PPRD) and its allied coalitions like the Alliance of the Presidential Majority (Alliance de la Majorité Présidentielle; AMP) and later the Common Front for Congo (Front Commun pour le Congo; FCC).<ref name=":482">Template:Cite web</ref> Political patronage networks linked to Kinshasa enabled members of these coalitions to influence national and provincial governance, with prominent South Kivu elites of the period including Jean-Marie Bulambo Kilosho, Benjamin Mukulungu Igobo, Norbert Basengezi Katintima, Zacharie Lwamira, Néhemie Mwilanya Wilondja (former chief of staff to the president), Marcellin Chishambo (former provincial governor), Justin Bitakwira, and Claude Nyamugabo Bazibuhe.<ref name=":482" /> These figures held influential positions across political, administrative, and economic institutions, serving as intermediaries between the central government and provincial constituencies. Meanwhile, opposition figures, including Jean-Claude Kibala N'Kold and François Rubota Masumbuko of the Social Movement for Renewal (Mouvement Social pour le Renouveau; MSR), as well as leaders of the Union for Democracy and Social Progress (UDPS), were marginalized primarily from provincial and national decision-making processes during this era.<ref name=":482" />

In 2019, a consensus reached among nine political leaders resulted in the formation of the FCC–CACH ticket, designating Théo Ngwabidje Kasi as Governor and Marc Malago as Vice-Governor of South Kivu.<ref name=":482" /> Following the transfer of power from Kabila to Félix Tshisekedi, the province gained greater prominence at the national level: the position of Chief of Staff, once occupied by Néhémie Mwilanya Wilondja under Kabila, was succeeded by Vital Kamerhe under Tshisekedi. Azarias Ruberwa continued to maintain his political influence with both presidents. The 9 political figures who in 2019 led to the formation of the FCC-CACH ticket:<ref name=":482" />

No. Leaders Ethnic affiliation Territories Political affiliation
1 Modeste Bahati Lukwebo Shi Kabare Alliance des Forces democratiques du Congo (AFDC)
2 Vital Kamerhe Shi Walungu Union for the Congolese Nation (UNC)
3 Azarias Ruberwa Munyarwanda (Munyamulenge) Fizi/Mwenga Rally for Congolese Democracy (RCD)
4 Jean-Marie Bulambo Lega Mwenga Parti National pour la Démocratie et la République (PANADER)
5 Martin Bitijula Mahimba Fuliru Uvira Parti démocrate chrétien (PCD)
6 Marcelin Cishambo Shi Walungu People's Party for Reconstruction and Democracy (PPRD)
7 Kyamusoke Bamusulanga Nta-Bote Lega Shabunda PPRD
8 Néhémie Mwilanya Wilondja Bembe Fizi PCD
9 Boniface Balamage Nkolo Havu Idjwi Action Alternative pour le Bien-être et Changement (AAB)

The collapse of the FCC–CACH coalition in December 2020 brought about a realignment of political alliances nationwide. Through public declarations, several deputies initially elected under FCC-affiliated parties announced their allegiance to the new ruling coalition, the Sacred Union of the Nation (Union sacrée de la Nation).<ref name=":482" /> This shift in the parliamentary majority was solidified by the removal of Alexis Thambwe Mwamba's leadership in the Senate, Jeannine Mabunda's dismissal from the National Assembly, and the resignation of Prime Minister Sylvestre Ilunga Ilukamba's government. Members of the UDPS in South Kivu, along with other leaders who aligned themselves with the Sacred Union, obtained ministerial positions and important administrative roles. Meanwhile, figures who maintained allegiance to the FCC and the Kabila faction faced a steep erosion of political clout, as their control over national and provincial bodies weakened considerably.<ref name=":482" /> In Kinshasa, Modeste Bahati Lukwebo reclaimed the Senate presidency after failing to secure it in 2019, while South Kivu native Vital Banywesize Mukulya Muhini of the AFDC-A took the post of Second Vice-President of the National Assembly.<ref name=":482" /> The prominence of Denise Nyakeru as First Lady also drew attention. These changes collectively bolstered South Kivu's elite representation in the central government. By May 2022, the Sama Lukonde cabinet included seven ministers from South Kivu out of a nationwide total of 58.<ref name=":482" />

Template:Multiple image

Political access continues to be defined by the intersection of ethnic and regional affiliations, which underpin legitimacy and representation. At the national level, elite co-optation relies on leaders' ability to mobilize support from their ethnic constituencies within South Kivu, which provides electoral leverage for the central government.<ref name=":482" /> However, at the provincial level, ethnic divisions tend to overshadow purely geographic distinctions, as ethnic groups are closely tied to specific territories. This dynamic means that political representation rests on ethno-territorial identity, and once leaders operate from Bukavu or Kinshasa, ethnic belonging becomes the primary driver of their political positioning, with regional origin becoming largely secondary.<ref name=":482" /> Prominent business and political actors often straddle economic and political spheres, leveraging their influence through the Federation of Congolese Enterprises (Fédération des Entreprises du Congo; FEC) and other networks. Notable figures include Jean-Pierre Mukubaganyi Mulume, former president of FEC South Kivu and elected national deputy in 2011 on the PPRD list; Olive Mudekereza Namegabe; and Didier Okito Lutundula, elected in 2018 under the Alliance of Democratic Forces of Congo (Alliance des Forces Démocratiques du Congo; AFDC) of Modeste Bahati Lukwebo.<ref name=":482" /> Power distribution thus remains deeply partisan and centralized, with Kinshasa exerting control over provincial affairs through the co-optation of political elites based in both the national capital and Bukavu.<ref name=":482" />

Since the 2006 democratic elections, the formation of provincial institutions has been subject to ongoing political negotiations among parties, coalitions, and individual leaders. These power-sharing arrangements often consider the province's ethnic and regional diversity, informally divided into three main political spheres: the Shi Sphere, covering Kabare, Walungu, Kalehe, Mwenga (specifically the chiefdoms of Luhwinja and Burhinyi), and Idjwi; the Lega Sphere, including Mwenga and Shabunda; and the Vira-Bembe Sphere, encompassing Uvira and Fizi.<ref name=":482" /> The composition of the provincial government and leadership within the provincial assembly generally echoes these ethno-regional dynamics to maintain a balance of representation. Roles within these institutions are split between administrative and political functions.<ref name=":482" /> Administrative posts belong to the permanent civil service, intended for long-term career professionals, while political positions, such as ministerial roles, cabinet advisers, and strategic appointments, are short-term and negotiated through coalition deals following elections.<ref name=":482" /> Access to such positions depends on participation in political negotiations and endorsement by the dominant actors, many of whom maintain dual influence in Kinshasa and Bukavu. South Kivu's political system remains highly personalized and fragmented, operating within a structure where ethnic affiliation, patronage, and party loyalty continue to dictate access to governance and the exercise of authority.<ref name=":482" />

Transport

The province has 1,041 km of national roads, of which 222 kilometers, or approximately 17 percent, are paved.<ref name=":50222">Template:Cite web</ref> There are also 813 kilometers of provincial roads and 2,301 kilometers of agricultural service routes. National Road No. 2 (RN2) serves as the primary route for accessing the mountainous region of South Kivu.<ref name=":50222" /> It links Bukavu with Goma and serves as a vital passage for the year-round evacuation of agricultural products.<ref name=":50222" /> Despite crossing the highlands of South Kivu, RN2 intersects territories with distinct geographical and infrastructural characteristics, and within Kabare Territory, three national roads, such as RN2, RN3, and RN5, converge.<ref name=":50222" />

The province's air transport system is centered on Kavumu Airport, situated in Kavumu, Kabare Territory, as well as several airstrips. Kavumu Airport's main destinations include Kinshasa, Goma, Lubumbashi, Namoya, Kindu, Kalemie, Minembwe, Kongolo, Shabunda, Lulimba, Lulinga, Kasese, Kalima, as well as Uganda and Rwanda.<ref name=":50222" /> The province's main navigable waterways are Lakes Kivu and Tanganyika. Lake Kivu is the main navigable waterway located near RN2.<ref name=":50222" /> Other means of transport, besides boats and trucks for goods and cars for passengers, include motorcycles and bicycles for travelers with light luggage and for the transportation of small merchandise.<ref name=":50222" />

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

Template:Sud-Kivu Template:Provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Template:Authority control