Clemence, 19, is a Rwandan returnee from eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo). She is overjoyed to be holding in her arms her two-week-old baby girl, Dalia*, in her homeland after a timely lifesaving intervention by the Save the Children’s health team at the border post between Rwanda and DR Congo.
When conflict broke out in early 2022 in eastern DR Congo, Clemence* lost her first child due to complications related to pregnancy, lack of access to basic maternal child health services and lingering insecurity and conflicts. Determined to protect her unborn baby, Clemence* and her family decided to repatriate to Rwanda, her home country.
The journey to her country has been very long, full of afflictions before reaching the border post to be handed over to the Rwandan immigration authorities. However, upon arrival, Clemence* immediately started experiencing lower abdominal pains and developed into full labour. Save the Children health workers, part of the emergency reception team stationed at the border post quickly noticed the abnormal behaviour and intervened, provided her with necessary support needed and rushed her to a nearby Gisenyi hospital in the northwestern Rwanda. Thanks to timely care and medical support, Clemence* safely delivered a healthy baby girl, Dalia*.
“My pregnancy was already full term during my journey back to Rwanda. I started feeling contractions while on the way, but kept moving until the border, where I was received and immediately taken to a nearby hospital and safely gave birth,” Clemence* said.
Following her recovery, Clemence* and her newborn joined nearly 140 other returnees at Kijote Reception Centre in northwestern Rwanda. There, she continued to receive essential postnatal services, including hygiene kits, regular growth monitoring, immunisation, and health and nutrition counselling through Save the Children’s healthcare programme. These services helped strengthen her confidence in breastfeeding and supported her baby’s healthy growth.
“Thanks to the quality healthcare I received, I delivered safely, and my baby girl and I are both healthy. I was so happy to give birth to my daughter in my homeland. Since she was born in Rwanda, she is now a Rwandan,” she said.
Save the children, in collaboration with the Government of Rwanda and UNHCR, provides health and nutrition services at the Kijote reception centre for Rwandan Returnees in Nyabihu district.
Upon announcement of returnee convoys, Save the Children deploys a frontline medical team at the border post to provide basic health care and lifesaving assistance to needy arrivals, mostly in exhaustion state, sick and psychosocial destitution.
Since January 2026, Save the Children International (SCI) has been implementing integrated health and nutrition interventions for Rwandan returnees accommodated at Kijote Reception Centre. The response includes the provision of primary health care services encompassing curative, promotive, and preventive care, routine nutrition screening and management of acute malnutrition, and continuous disease surveillance. In parallel, SCI has supported the measles outbreak response through integrated surveillance and vaccination activities at the centre.
By March 2026, a total of 392 returnees had been screened for malnutrition, leading to the admission of 31 children with acute malnutrition into the nutrition programme. In addition, SCI provided Blanket Supplementary Feeding Programme (BSFP) support to children aged 6–23 months, pregnant and lactating women (PLW), people living with HIV (PLHIV), and patients with other medical comorbidities requiring nutritional supplementation among the returnees and asylum seekers.
While health and nutrition needs remain critically high for the returnees and refugees, humanitarian funding continues to decline, placing the most vulnerable populations at increased risk.