Finn Stands for Rights (FinnRight) | Urgent Campaign Dispatch Congo Genocide | Pori, Finland

URGENT ACTION Congolese civilians are being massacred, abducted, and driven from their homes in a genocide the world has chosen to ignore. No intervention. No marches. No accountability. Only death and a silence that must end today.

The Killing That the World Refuses to Name

A high-resolution black and white photojournalistic image of people walking down a dirt path in a scorched landscape after a conflict. In the foreground, viewed from behind, a mother in a t-shirt holds her two young children,Congo Genocide

There is a genocide happening right now.

Not in the past. Not in a history book. Not in a documentary that will air next year when it is already too late. It is happening tonight in the forests of eastern Congo, in burned villages, in makeshift camps where mothers are searching for children they may never find again.

And the world is not watching.

Finn Stands for Rights Finn Right is a Finnish human rights organisation based in Pori, Finland. It has one purpose in issuing this campaign: to force the institutions of international power to look directly at what is happening in

the Democratic Republic of Congo Genocide and to act not with statements, not with expressions of concern, but with immediate, concrete, life-saving intervention.

This is not a request. This is a demand. And it carries the full moral weight of every life that has already been lost while the world deliberated.

An Open Demand to the Most Powerful Institutions on Earth

A realistic photo of a protest in a displacement camp in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Many men, women, and children are standing in front of blue and white tents. They are holding signs and banners that say 'Peace for the East of DRC,' 'UN Security Council: Protect Us,' and 'African Union: Act Now.' The main banner asks the UN, AU, and EU to take action immediately."

FinnRight addresses this urgent campaign to:

Each of these bodies carries a binding legal and moral obligation to protect civilian life. That obligation does not pause for geopolitical convenience. It does not shrink when a crisis becomes difficult or when donor fatigue sets in. It does not expire.

The people of the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo are being killed. The law is clear. The evidence is documented. The obligation to act is absolute.

What Is Happening Inside the Congo And Why It Cannot Be Ignored

A documentary photograph captures a somber gathering in a remote village in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). In the foreground, Congolese villagers of all ages, including elderly men and women, mothers with young children, and a few men, are seated on weathered wooden benches and logs. They are listening to a village leader who gestures as he speaks, his face reflecting sorrow and resilience. To the right, two human rights researchers, one wearing a blue Amnesty International vest and taking notes, are recording the conversation with an audio recorder. One woman in the crowd holds a framed photograph of a young man, likely a relative lost to violence. In the background, a large banner made of white fabric, draped on wooden poles, bears large, hand-painted black text in French: 'LES FORCES DÉMOCRATIQUES ALLIÉES (ADF) : STOPPEZ LE CARNAGE CONTRE LES CIVILS. NOUS NE SOMMES PAS DES CIBLES.' The setting is outdoors, next to simple, makeshift shelters against a backdrop of rolling, green but rugged mountains under an overcast sky. The image has a raw, natural light and a shallow depth of field, focusing sharply on the villagers and the sign, while still conveying the remote village environment."

A Campaign of Terror Against Ordinary People

The Allied Democratic Forces an armed group operating across North Kivu and Ituri provinces with documented links to the Islamic State — has carried out a sustained and escalating campaign of mass violence against civilian communities across eastern DRC.

This is not combat between armed forces. This is the deliberate targeting of ordinary people farmers, teachers, mothers, children, grandparents in their homes, their fields, their hospitals, and their places of mourning.

Amnesty International researchers who conducted ground-level investigations in November 2025 interviewing 71 survivors, witnesses, and humanitarian workers documented the following:

These are not isolated incidents. They form a pattern deliberate, systematic, and sustained that meets the legal definition of crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.

The Voices That Must Be Heard

"A documentary-style photo taken in a small village room in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. A distraught Congolese woman, a mother in her 30s, sits center frame at a wooden table, speaking with a microphone in hand. Her eyes are filled with tears and her left hand is raised in a gesture of speaking. She holds a small, faded photograph of a young child in her right hand. On the table is a simple cardboard sign, hand-painted with black text, reading, ‘SURVIVORS SPEAK: THE WORLD MUST LISTEN.’ Behind her sit several other local villagers, many clearly distressed and wiping away tears. A man holds a small digital video camera on a tripod. An international NGO worker, wearing a FinnRight vest and badge, sits taking notes with a pen and notepad, and another woman also in a FinnRight vest and badge. A banner on the mud-brick wall behind them reads, ‘FINNRIGHT - GIVING A VOICE TO THE VOICELESS.’ The mood is emotionally heavy and solemn, with natural lighting from a nearby doorway. The depth of field is shallow, focusing sharply on the woman and her signs, blurring the background."

Survivors Speak The World Must Listen

Behind every documented statistic is a human being whose life has been permanently broken by violence they did nothing to invite.

A woman who spent more than two years in ADF captivity before managing to escape said this:

“In the bush, you had to do what you were told. You cannot be weak.”

She was not describing a battlefield. She was describing her daily existence as a person held in conditions of slavery, forced to participate in acts she had no power to refuse.

A survivor of an attack in which her child was killed and her home burned said:

“I have been consumed by fear.”

Another woman who survived the same attack asked a question that no government, no institution, and no world leader has yet answered adequately:

What is our crime that we are being subjected to such horrors? How much more pain must our people endure before the world finally intervenes?

FinnRight does not have the power to answer that question on behalf of the international community. But it has the power and the responsibility to make sure that question is heard in every room where decisions are made.

Four Realities the World Must Confront

An expansive, documentary-style photograph capturing a dense camp for internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Thousands of makeshift shelters, built from salvage and plastic, cover a steep hillside under a partly cloudy sky. Hundreds of Congolese civilians walk along a muddy pathway in the foreground. Several individuals hold up hand-made signs and banners. Visible text includes: '7 MILLION DISPLACED', 'GENOCIDE IN REAL TIME', 'WORLD, WATCH US', and 'DRC: A NATION IN FLIGHT'. The image focuses on the human scale of the displacement crisis."

Reality One A Genocide Is Unfolding in Real Time

The 1948 Genocide Convention defines genocide as acts carried out with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a distinct group of people.

The systematic mass killing, forced displacement, sexual violence, deliberate starvation, and destruction of civilian infrastructure being carried out against Congo Genocide communities satisfies that definition.

Over seven million people have been forcibly displaced across the eastern DRC the largest internal displacement crisis on the African continent. Entire communities have ceased to exist. Generations of people have been scattered, killed, or taken.

This is genocide. The law names it. The evidence proves it. The world must say it.

Reality Two Families Are Losing Everything

Every displacement figure represents a human being who once had a home, a routine, a community, and a future.

The ADF’s campaign is designed specifically to destroy those things to take people who had lives and reduce them to survivors hiding in forests with no food, no shelter, and no certainty that anyone is coming to help.

A young girl abducted before the age of fifteen described what happened after she was taken:

“They started teaching us Arabic.Following our religious indoctrination, we were forced into combat drills. Once that instruction was complete, they deployed us to participate in armed raids.

She was a child. She had no choice. She is a victim. And she is one of thousands.

Reality Three Western Capitals Have Chosen Silence

When atrocities occur in certain parts of the world, governments respond within hours. Emergency sessions are convened. Sanctions are announced. Civil society organises marches that fill city squares.

That has not happened for the Congo Genocide.

There are no mass demonstrations in Helsinki, London, Berlin, or New York calling for the protection of Congo Genocide civilians. There are no emergency parliamentary debates. There is no front-page urgency. There is, overwhelmingly, silence.

FinnRight names this silence for what it is: a moral failure with a body count.

The lives of Congo Genocide civilians are not worth less than the lives of people in other parts of the world.These fundamental principles are upheld and protected by every established pillar of international human rights legislation.

Every government that has signed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights has committed to that principle.

It is time to honour that commitment not with words, but with action.

Reality Four The United Nations Has Not Done Enough

Alt TextA complex, symbolic photo-composite in a rural Congolese village, based on image_8.png. The left side features a crowd of villagers with the central woman holding her specific French-language cardboard sign, surrounded by papers flying from crumbling huts. The right side shows UN peacekeepers and their vehicles, half-submerged and entangled in massive, chaotic piles of suffocating bureaucratic files, old documents, file cabinets, and red tape, with a frustrated UN officer almost crushed by the weight. Above this, a large, patched banner reads, "BUREAUCRACY CRUSHES LIFE. UN SECURITY COUNCIL: ACT NOW, NOT LATER. ACTION IS A MORAL OBLIGATION." The scene juxtaposes human demand for action with systemic inertia.

The UN peacekeeping mission MONUSCO has maintained a presence in the DRC for years. That presence has not been sufficient to stop the ADF’s campaign. Its mandate has not matched the scale of the violence. Its resources have not reflected the urgency of the crisis.

The UN Security Council has the authority to act decisively. The African Union has regional standing and political weight that has not been fully deployed. The European Union has diplomatic and financial instruments that remain largely unused in the context of eastern Congo Genocide .

Each of these institutions bears responsibility for every day of inaction that follows a day on which action was possible.

FinnRight’s Four Demands Clear, Legal, and Non-Negotiable

A wide-angle, documentary-style photograph of a large, diverse protest in a major European city square at dusk. Hundreds of people are gathered, many holding professional and hand-made signs that read "FINNRIGHT DEMANDS: STOP THE GENOCIDE IN CONGO," "GLOBAL MOBILISATION FOR DRC," "UNSC: YOUR INACTION IS MORAL COWARDICE," and "AFRICAN UNION: RISE TO THE OBLIGATION". In the foreground, a woman speaks into a megaphone while others hold a large central banner. In the background, a large screen on a building projects images of Congolese children alongside the text "FINNRIGHT DEMANDS: INDEPENDENT INTERVENTION NOW". The atmosphere is one of urgent global mobilization and moral pressure.

FinnRight formally places the following demands before the United Nations Security Council, the African Union, the European Union, and every member state of the international community:

Demand One: Immediate Independent Intervention

Armed groups committing genocide against civilian populations must be stopped not after further consultations, not after the next report, not after the next election cycle. Now. Independent intervention with a clear, enforceable mandate to protect civilian life must be deployed without any further delay.

Demand Two: Emergency Protection for Civilians Every person displaced by ADF violence requires immediate access to safe shelter, clean water, nutritious food, and medical care.

The international humanitarian response to eastern DRC must be scaled to reflect the actual magnitude of the crisis not the diminished version that donor fatigue and political distraction have allowed it to become.

Demand Three: Global Mobilisation

Governments, civil society organisations, faith communities, universities, trade unions, and individual citizens must bring the same moral energy and sustained pressure to the Congo that they have brought to other crises.

That means marches. That means sanctions. That means diplomatic pressure applied consistently, publicly, and without relief until the killing stops.

Demand Four: United Nations Accountability

A documentary-style photograph taken in a Congolese village. A group of men, women, and children stand together with somber and determined expressions. A woman in the center holds a large cardboard sign with hand-painted black text that reads: "DEMAND FOUR: UNITED NATIONS ACCOUNTABILITY. INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATION INTO ATROCITIES. GENUINE MANDATE TO PROTECT. ICC ACCOUNTABILITY". Next to her, another woman holds a worn notebook with a small photo of a child attached to it. In the background, simple mud-brick houses and white UNHCR tents are visible under a clear sky. Several people in the group hold pens and notebooks, symbolizing the documentation of evidence.

A full, independent investigation into atrocities committed in eastern DRC must be launched without delay. UN peacekeeping forces in the region must be given a mandate with genuine authority and resources sufficient to protect the lives they have been sent to guard.

Accountability for those who have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity must be pursued through every available legal mechanism including the International Criminal Court.

The Weight of Doing Nothing

A somber, documentary-style photograph set inside a dimly lit community room in the Democratic Republic of Congo. A woman in her 30s sits at a wooden desk with tears in her eyes, looking directly at the camera. She rests her hand on an open lined notebook; an inset close-up shows her name, 'Emily Kahindo', signed above the French words 'Je ne serai pas complice' (I will not be complicit). Next to the notebook is a cardboard sign that reads 'MON SILENCE N'EST PAS UNE OPTION.' (My silence is not an option). Behind her, other villagers sit at desks, some writing in notebooks and others looking on with serious expressions. A white banner in the background reads 'FINNRIGHT DEMANDE: ACTION MAINTENANT POUR L’EST DU RDC. SOUFFRANCE NE PEUT ATTENDRE.' (FinnRight Demands: Action now for Eastern DRC. Suffering cannot wait).

There is a cost to inaction. It is not abstract. It is not theoretical. It is measured in the number of people who die between the moment action becomes possible and the moment it is finally taken.

Every day the UN Security Council does not act, people die in eastern Congo Genocide who might have lived. Every day the African Union does not deploy its full political weight, families are destroyed that might have been protected.

Every day Western governments maintain their silence, children are abducted who might have been kept safe.

Finn Right is asking every person of conscience to sign this petition to add their name to a demand that will be carried to every institution named in this document maintaining our outcry until the world’s reaction truly reflects the desperate suffering of the Congo Genocide people.

A signature is not sufficient. But silence is complicity.

“These abuses constitute war crimes which the world must not continue to ignore.” Agnès Callamard, Secretary General, Amnesty International

The People of Congo Are Waiting

A poignant, documentary-style photograph taken at night in a displaced persons camp in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Under a dark, cloudy sky, a Congolese woman sits at a rough wooden desk, her face illuminated by a warm, nearby light source. She is being interviewed, speaking into a microphone held by an unseen person, while she holds a pen over a notebook of testimonies. Propped against her desk is a cardboard sign with hand-painted French text: "LE MONDE DOIT DÉCIDER : NOS VIES COMPTENT" (The world must decide: Our lives matter). Behind her, several other villagers—including an elderly man and a mother holding a small child—stand in the shadows with somber, expectant expressions. The background shows the silhouettes of makeshift tents, creating a sense of urgency and quiet resilience.

Somewhere tonight, in the eastern DRC, a mother is searching for her children in the dark. A survivor is lying awake with injuries that have not been treated. A child who was taken is being told to pick up a weapon.

They are waiting not for sympathy, not for carefully worded statements, not for another report that will be filed and forgotten. They are waiting for the world to decide that their lives matter enough to protect.

FinnRight has made that decision. It is asking the world to make it too.

Sign the petition. Break the silence. The Congo cannot wait.

TAKE ACTION NOW

Finn Right Finn Stands for Rights | Pori, Finland To add your voice, sign the petition and share this campaign through every available channel. The people of the Congo cannot afford to wait any longer.

Read how Finn Right campaigns for forgotten victims of genocide Congo Genocide and human rights violations across the world’s most ignored crises.

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