UNITED NATIONS OFFICIAL URGES MORE
EFFORTS TO CURB MUSLIM-CHRISTIAN VIOLENCE IN CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
UNITED NATIONS - With rival Christian and
Muslim militias stoking inter-communal violence, a senior UN relief official
said on Friday that the international community has ‘so far failed the people’
of Central African Republic amid ethnic cleansing and thousands of deaths. At a
Press conference, John Ging, the Director of UN humanitarian operations,
appealed for more security forces and funding to prevent the country from
splitting along religious lines.
Just back from Boda, a town located in the
southern part of CAR, said that while the situation in the country is
‘deteriorating at an alarming rate,’ he was also struck by a profoundly
worrying shift in the attitudes of the people since his last visit three months
ago. ‘When I was there before, the people were then identifying armed groups
[either anti-balaka or Seleka rebels] as the problem. Now, the common refrain
is that 'communities' are at fault: Christians and Muslims blaming each other.
This is now the ugly face of the conflict,’ he told reporters at a UN
Headquarters Press briefing.
Fighting in CAR has taken on an increasingly
sectarian nature following a 2012 rebel-led coup and has since become more
brutal with reports of ongoing human rights violations and reprisal clashes
between largely Christian anti-balaka and mostly Muslim Seleka rebels that have
displaced hundreds of thousands of people both inside and outside the country,
and left 2.2 million in need of humanitarian aid. ‘This ethnic and religious
dimension has resulted in the segmentation and segregation of communities.
Ordinary people are being radicalised…manipulated [and] made to believe that
segregation is the solution to the crisis,’ Ging said, emphasising the abject
fear in which the various communities are now living. Providing a stark example
of this, he said that in Boda, the 24,000 Muslims – a minority in the town
–feel they are under threat and that evacuation is the only way to be safe.
Moreover, Christian leaders in the area were also urging that Muslim villagers
be evacuated, compounding their fears and stoking intolerance. ‘People are
asking to be moved from their own communities.’
‘Attempts at inter-communal dialogue have
failed. Needless to say, evacuation and separation are not the solution,’ said
Ging, adding, however, that ‘as humanitarians, we have to carry out these
evacuations.’ ‘
The basis for fear is real and the challenge
on the security side is, at present, bigger than our capacity to deal with it,
leaving the people with an impossible choice,’ he said, whether to stay in
their communities and possibly be killed, or to flee their homes with nothing.
Strife-riven Bossangoa, where ‘all Muslims
are gone now’, some 2,000 having fled on their own and the rest, evacuated with
the help of the UN, is a case in point.
And while deeply impressed by the
‘outstanding leadership’ in the Central African Republic in the face of such an
overwhelming and multifaceted crisis, he said that at present, the Government's
capacity ‘is severely limited.’ As such, it is now up to the international
community to help prevent despair and hopelessness from further permeating
communities around the country. The world must uphold its responsibility. ‘If
it does so, the situation can be turned around,’ Ging said, recalling CAR's
long history of inter-communal tolerance and cooperation. For example, he said
that traditionally, the Muslim community was largely involved in CAR's trade
and industry sectors and the fact that they cannot conduct their business
freely is compounding the problems for all communities in the country.
‘First and foremost, what we have to do is
counter the fear that is gripping the population; they are consumed by fear and
hopelessness and they see armed groups conducting attacks with impunity on both
sides,’ Ging said. He said the abiding sense of hopelessness is being fomented
by armed groups, and ordinary people on all sides were becoming convinced that
the ideology of ethnic cleansing ‘which we have seen play out tragically’ in
other countries, is inevitable in the CAR…’and this is very worrying as it is a
foundation for further atrocities.’
‘This is where the international community
comes in,’ and, while expressing support for the African-led International
Support Mission to the Central African Republic (MISCA) and French support
troops known as Sangaris, he said that hose forces have limited resources and
limited numbers and cannot provide country-wide protection. ‘The only way
people can even begin to contemplate rebuilding their lives is if there is real
security,’ he said, adding, that while people were very hopeful about the
deployment of the newly-mandated UN peacekeeping mission in CAR: ‘They need
security now’.
Beyond the security dimension, he urged a
focus on the lack of funding. He recalled that a pledging conference in
February generated some $200 million in pledges, but four months later, only
$123 million had been provided. And this
was only part of a total $500 million appeal. With the total appeal only 28 per
cent funded, CAR was left short of medicine and food and other necessary
humanitarian supplies, a dire situation made worse because the rainy season is
beginning in earnest. ‘We can't say that it's a forgotten crisis or that we
don't know what is needed,’ he said. ‘The response has not been mobilised on the
scale or in the timeframe needed to solve the problem.’
Ging reiterated that ‘it is not enough to
have a discussion about what's right or what's wrong in principle; it's what
are we going to do in practice. So it is our duty to protect these people.’
‘The international community must mobilise
effective protection for people where they are – ensuring that CAR Government
is present to create confidence, uphold the rule of law and end impunity. This
is what the international community must support,’ he said.
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