Democratic Republic Of Congo
The volcano that erupted in the Democratic Republic of Congo on Saturday had not been monitored for seven months, according to the UN's radio station Okapi, adding that funding from the World Bank had been stopped almost a year ago.
On Sunday, residents of the Buhene district returned to the tragic scene and many blame Goma's volcano observatory.
“We realised that the OVG (volcano observatory) doesn't really care about people. That is why we denounce the incompetence of the OVG. We demand the immediate resignation of the provincial director of the OVG and his entire team," said resident Kanduki Grace.
"We weren't even expecting this. It surprised us at 19:30 p.m.," he told Africanews.
"No one ate, children are lost. I lost my whole house that you see there. There was my mother, my brothers, my chickens and a lot of other possessions. I no longer know the role of the Volcano Observatory. "
The lava that descended from the Nyiragongo volcano stopped a few hundred meters from Goma, the main city in the eastern region that borders Rwanda.
On Saturday night, thousands of people were forced to flee to the streets after their homes were destroyed. Thousands of others have fled to neighbouring Rwanda.
The Nyiragongo remains active and authorities call on the population to be vigilant.
The volcano, located 10km from Goma, last erupted in 2002, killing 250 people and made 120,000 homeless.
No casualties have so far been reported in the latest eruption.
01:06
UK-Rwanda asylum plan: "we don't want any more prevarication or delay"- says Sunak
00:51
Rwandan president meets with UK PM at 10 Downing Street
01:48
Rwanda: "Never will our people be left for dead again"- Kagame
Go to video
Rwanda genocide: No fresh remark on France’s responsibility, why did the presidency backpedal?
01:13
Kagame blames world's 'cowardice' as Rwanda remembers 1994 genocide
01:56
In a reconciliation village, Rwanda is building a community out of tragedy