Photo: Till Muellenmeister/IRIN. French soldiers protect a convoy of fleeing muslims from an angry mob
Source: IRIN
BANGUI, 28 February 2014 (IRIN) - Zannah Bassar, a Muslim woman living
in the Central African Republic (CAR) capital, Bangui, has a simple
message for the international community - she wants to be evacuated.
“I was born in this district,” she told IRIN this week, “but my home has
been wrecked. I’ve been sleeping in the street for the past month and I
want to send an SOS. I want to go somewhere else.”
Bassar and about 3,200 fellow Muslims are trapped in a kilometer-long
district of Bangui known as PK12. Half a dozen other Muslims IRIN
interviewed in the same district this week all said they wanted to
leave.
“The people in PK12 have a deep desire to get out of there,” said
Jacques Seurt, head of mission for the International Organization for
Migration (IOM) in CAR, which has stopped chartering rescue flights out
of the country for lack of funding.
“They are under constant threat from the anti-balaka as are other Muslims in the west of the country.”
The country’s Muslims have been the target of reprisal attacks because
the Seleka rebel alliance that toppled the government in March 2013 was
predominantly made up of Muslims and committed widespread atrocities in
many parts of the country.
The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) reported on 25 February that “more than
15,000 people in 18 locations are surrounded by armed groups across the
west of the CAR… and at high risk of attack,” adding that most of these
people are Muslim.
"Areas we are particularly worried about include the PK12 neighbourhood
in Bangui and the towns of Boda, Bouar and Bossangoa," a spokesman said.
Anti-balaka have been firing grenades at PK12 from surrounding hills and
infiltrating the area, wounding several people, said Peter Neussl of
the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
On 19 February, UNHCR reported, the anti-balaka attacked a convoy of
people trying to escape from PK12. All 21 men in the convoy were killed,
leaving 119 children and 19 women, who fled to a nearby village.
Security has improved in Bangui since December when around 1,000 people
were killed there in a few days, but attacks are still happening almost
daily. On 22 February three Muslims were dragged from a taxi and shot
dead at an anti-balaka road block, two days later five men were killed
in the PK5 district and on 26 February four Muslim children were
kidnapped (an OCHA worker helped negotiate their release two days
later).
Options for relocation
Until recently a high proportion of the Muslims in CAR were Chadians, or
of Chadian descent. In the past two months Chad’s government has been
organizing large convoys, escorted by the Chadian army, to evacuate its
citizens from CAR, but on 20 February, after the attack on the convoy
from PK12, N’djamena announced an end to these operations and declared
that 99 percent of its citizens that wanted to leave CAR had left.
Many Muslims interviewed by IRIN at PK12, Bouar and Bossangoa in the
past two weeks said they want to go to Chad, as they have relatives
there, but this option is becoming more difficult, and aid agencies are
under increasing pressure to find other options.
Up to now aid agencies’ involvement in evacuations from CAR has mainly
been limited to work by IOM, which has chartered flights for around
5,000 third country nationals, and UNHCR, which has assisted some
refugees with travel.
OCHA is now considering plans for moving populations within the country.
Facilitating a division of the country on religious (and largely ethnic)
lines will be controversial for aid workers. Amnesty International said
last month that nobody wanted a debate on the issue.
But some officials feel it can no longer be ignored.
“We shall be judged by the effectiveness of our actions, not the
elegance of our principles,” a senior aid worker said confidentially.
“We don’t want to be complicit with ethnic cleansing but nor do we want
any share of the blame for ethnic extermination.”
Peter Neussl explained current thinking: “We want to give people options
for relocation. We are exploring possibilities inside Bangui of moving
people to places that would be easier to protect.”
Transferring people within Bangui would be easier logistically, he said,
as it is hard to find trucks and drivers who will take the risk of
driving Muslims long distances through hostile territory, even with an
armed escort.
Apart from the ill-fated convoy from PK12, other trucks have also come
under fire or had grenades thrown at them in CAR in recent weeks. Five
people were killed in one such incident and more than 20 in another,
while the anti-balaka attacked a convoy of 89 vehicles on 16 February,
wounding 12 civilians, although the attack was beaten off by the escort
of peacekeepers.
“In the long term, people want to live in their home areas in security,”
Neussl said, “but as a mid-term solution we are considering moving
Muslims from PK12 to safer towns outside Bangui. We would have to be
very careful about the possible impact of such transfers on the host
population.”
Neussl emphasized that relocation should be a last resort.
UN Secretary-General Special Representative in CAR Boubacar Gaye told
IRIN: “The secretary-general made very clear before the [Security]
Council this week that we should do our utmost to stop the exodus of the
Muslim population, and this is also the understanding of [CAR’s] Madam
President Samba-Panza.
“Security is the first priority. The option of moving people under the
international community’s escort is an option, one of the planning
options.”
He stressed that any such move must be fully coordinated with the
national authorities and fully explained, and that it would be “very
dangerous for the future of the country to have all the Muslims in one
part of the country and a de facto partition”, as this would be “sowing
the seeds for future confrontation”.
The exodus of most Muslim traders and cattle herders from western CAR is
already having serious economic effects, with meat and other products
now scarce in the markets and concerns that supplies will deteriorate
further.
Views from northwestern CAR
The UN’s senior humanitarian official Valerie Amos canvassed people’s
views about relocation during her visit last week to Bossangoa, a town
about 350km north of Bangui where some 1,200 Muslims are living in and
around a school, l’Ecole de Liberté.
The town’s imam Ismail Nahi told Amos:
“If there were peace and security all the Muslims would come back… but
the Christians have made it clear they don’t want to live with Muslims
in this country. Wherever they find Muslims they will kill them and cut
them into little pieces.”
A women’s group leader, Kadjidja Hassan, said people did not want to go
to Chad because they had been in CAR a long time, but she added that
they have now been in the camp for five months, and: “Muslims have been
attacked in all the villages around Bossangoa. A Muslim can’t move more
than one kilometre from this site. We’re all crammed in here, and our
husbands can’t do anything. How can we live in Bossangoa?”
With Chadian African Union troops providing security, there have been
almost no killings of Muslims in Bossangoa in the past two months, but
nearly all the camp dwellers IRIN spoke to said they needed more
security, although not all said they wanted to leave.
A group of men accused the district administrator (prefect), who was
with the visiting delegation, of distributing weapons to the anti-balaka
and said that if she were removed from her post they could stay on in
Bossangoa. The prefect denied the accusations.
The typical view from most people seemed to be that unless they have
security, by which they appeared to mean free movement outside their
little ghetto, they would prefer to leave Bossangoa.
Although aid agencies are providing water and basic rations, living
conditions are worsening, as the supplies that many people brought to
the camp when they abandoned their shops are now finished.
IRIN interviewed Muslims at a site around a mosque in Bouar, near
Cameroon, on 14 February. The “camp president” there said many at the
site wanted to stay in the area but most other interviewees said they
wanted to leave, as did most of the Muslims interviewed at a
displacement site in Baoro, 50km away.
At both sites Muslims said they could not walk around the town as the anti-balaka would kill them.
The Muslims’ attitude may have changed in Bouar since the French
military mission (Operation Sangaris) deployed about 300 men to the area
on 15 February.
The situation at Bossangoa, Bouar and PK12 is not replicated everywhere
in western CAR. UNHCR said on 25 February that “in some towns like Paoua
(near the Chadian border) and in some quarters of Bangui, communities
continue living and working together, although atrocities are frequently
committed.”
So far there has been much less communal violence in the centre and east
of the country where the Muslim population is larger. Nationally the
proportion of Muslims was estimated at around 15 percent, but it is now
lower.
More police needed
International security forces are to be reinforced in CAR, with 1,000
European Union peacekeepers due to be deployed soon. International
Crisis Group analyst Thierry Vircoulon argues that more police, rather
than troops, should be the priority.
The government is currently deploying only about 150 gendarmes (with
donor funding) and even they man checkpoints alongside the anti-balaka,
while the international police forces are well below the mandated level.
Winning public support in the battle against the anti-balaka may be a
long process, as they are seen by many of the population as liberators
after their fight against the largely Muslim Seleka rebels.
Most of the international security forces have tended to avoid
confronting the anti-balaka, who can cause major disruption, and have
closed down the airport on several occasions.
On 25 February IRIN passed the corpse of a Muslim man that had been
lying at a crossroads in Bangui for several hours. A group of youths
standing nearby said they had killed the Muslim with rocks and machetes
because he had crossed a “red line”.
Peacekeeper patrols had passed the spot several times that morning but the youths were still at their checkpoint.