Jill Biden
Dr Jill Biden met with women parliamentarians in Kinshasa. Photograph: Junior D Kannah /AFP /Getty

Wife of US vice-president makes DRC stop on three-country tour of Africa, to highlight issues facing women and girls

Jill Biden, the wife of US vice-president Joe Biden, traveled Saturday to conflict-wracked Democratic Republic of Congo, where she met with survivors of sexual violence as part of her three-nation tour of the continent.

Her trip to Zambia, the DRC and Sierra Leone, focused on highlighting issues facing women and girls, marks her third to Africa since Joe Biden became vice-president.

During her stop in the Bukavu area, Biden visited the Panzi Hospital, which treats sexual violence survivors. As she was greeted by hospital personnel, she said she wanted “to learn and better understand the challenges facing Congolese women.”

Rape has long been used as a weapon of war on all sides of the conflict in eastern Congo, which has been mired in fighting for more than two decades.

She said that US financing of projects had helped provide medical and psychological assistance to 13,000 victims in the country last year, and close to 4,000 women received legal help.

Biden also commended Dr Denis Mukwege, an internationally renowned gynaecologist who founded the hospital in 1999 and whose team has treated tens of thousands of victims. In 2012, Mukwege survived an assassination attempt after armed intruders held his family at gunpoint.

“Thanks to your extraordinary efforts to fight against sexual violence, to fight against impunity and to offer services to survivors,” she said. “Not only do you improve the lives of thousands of Congolese women but you help change the face of Africa.”

Biden, who traveled to Zambia earlier, is also visiting a center that helps former child soldiers before she leaves the DRC. On Sunday, she stops in Sierra Leone before heading back to the United States