What's new

Central African Republic: 'Ethnic cleansing' of Muslims

xTra

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Feb 4, 2011
Messages
2,215
Reaction score
-2
Country
India
Location
India
_72923716_72923715.jpg


Around 100,000 displaced people are living among the planes at a makeshift camp at Bangui airport

International peacekeepers have failed to prevent the ethnic cleansing of Muslims in the Central African Republic, a human rights group says.

Militia attacks have led to a "Muslim exodus of historic proportions", according to a report by Amnesty International.

Aid groups have warned of a food crisis, as many of the shops and wholesalers were run by Muslims.

The UN's World Food Programme has started a month-long aid airlift.

The roads are too dangerous to transport food without a military escort, WFP spokesman Alexis Masciarelli told the BBC.

This is why the UN agency is taking the more expensive option of flying food in from neighbouring Cameroon.

The first flight carrying 82 tonnes of rice arrived on Wednesday, with a further 1,800 tonnes of cereal to follow in the coming weeks.

This is enough to feed 150,000 people but he said it was not enough as 1.25 million need food aid in the country.



_72929061_72929060.jpg

Grounded plans at M'poko airport in Bangui have become temporary homes for thousands of people in the Central African Republic.

_72929057_72929056.jpg

The airport provides a sense of safety, located near the bases of French and African peacekeeping troops.

_72929404_72929403.jpg

But food is in short supply for residents of the tented city and beyond.

_72929063_72929062.jpg

Aid workers say people are still arriving at the camp with horrendous wounds from machete attacks and shootings.

According to the UN, 90% of the population are eating just one meal a day.

Prices are said to have shot up after many Muslim traders fled the capital Bangui.

Mr Masciarelli said some of the food would be distributed immediately at a camp at Bangui airport, to which some 100,000 people have fled.

He said that food would also be distributed to schools, churches and mosques around the country where people have sought refuge from the violence.

'Acquiesced to violence'
France has sent 1,600 troops to CAR, along with 5,500 from African countries, to help combat a crisis which has lasted more than a year.

French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian is in Bangui to see the situation for himself.

On Tuesday, UN chief Ban Ki-moon warned that the country risked being divided into Muslim and Christian areas.

"Both Muslims and Christians have been murdered and forced to flee their homes," he said.

"The sectarian brutality is changing the country's demography. The de facto partition of the CAR is a distinct risk."

Muslims are being attacked after the mainly Muslim Seleka rebel force seized power last year and was accused of killing and raping Christian civilians and destroying entire villages.

Its leader stepped down in January but instead of defusing the situation, Christian vigilante groups - calling themselves the "anti-balaka" self-defence forces - have been taking revenge on Muslims, forcing them to flee Bangui and other towns.

Amnesty International claimed some of the international peacekeepers "have acquiesced to violence in some cases by allowing abusive anti-balaka militias to fill the power vacuum created by the Seleka's departure".

The London-based organisation called on the peacekeepers to break the control of the anti-balaka and station troops in areas where Muslims are being threatened.

Amnesty also notes that Seleka fighters are continuing to attack Christians even after they have left the capital.

"The urgency of the situation demands an immediate response," said Joanne Mariner, senior crisis response adviser at Amnesty.

"It is time for the peacekeeping operation in CAR to protect the civilian population, deploy to threatened areas, and stop this forced exodus."

_72350904_central_african_republic_624map_v3.jpg


Source : BBC News - Central African Republic: 'Ethnic cleansing' of Muslims
 
. .
This is only one side of the story
 
Last edited:
. . .
The current violence, hatred, and instability are a direct result of the human rights crisis that began in December 2012, when mostly Muslim Seleka forces launched an armed offensive that culminated in their seizure of power in March 2013. In power for nearly ten months, the Seleka were responsible for massacres, extrajudicial executions, rape, torture, and looting, as well as massive burning and destruction of Christian villages.

As the Seleka withdrew, the international forces allowed the anti-balaka militias to take control of town after town. The resulting violence and forcible expulsion of Muslim communities were predictable.

The waning power of the Seleka has not lessened their brutality as they leave. Even with their movement and operational capability significantly hampered, they have continued to carry out vicious attacks on Christian civilians and their property. Armed members of Muslim communities, acting independently or alongside Seleka forces, have also carried out brutal and large scale sectarian attacks on Christian civilians.

Its not issue of Muslims of Christians . Its Issue of Inland Africans who stop nothing short of eliminating anything which is different . Whether it was Hutu-Tusti conflict ,Explusion of Indians from Uganda or This issue . But lets hope things change in the future .
 
.
I say send the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban to Central African Republic to do jihad for their black African brothers
 
. . .
Its not issue of Muslims of Christians . Its Issue of Inland Africans who stop nothing short of eliminating anything which is different . Whether it was Hutu-Tusti conflict ,Explusion of Indians from Uganda or This issue . But lets hope things change in the future .

Hear,hear ! More muslim nations should join the french and the EU for the peacekeeping effort.An international effort should be mustered to keep those savages (i'm sry but they are! both sides !) from killing each other.Yes,Turkey,Saudi Arabia,UAE,Indonesia (the most prosperous ones today) i mean you.
 
. .
Nobody is dancing just stating a fact,where did you saw me celebrating??

I never pointed my fingers at you.

I'm just sayin' that some people are either doubtful about what's talking place or indifferent.
 
.
Hear,hear ! More muslim nations should join the french and the EU for the peacekeeping effort.An international effort should be mustered to keep those savages (i'm sry but they are! both sides !) from killing each other.Yes,Turkey,Saudi Arabia,UAE,Indonesia (the most prosperous ones today) i mean you.


Or just don't interfere in any way. Let them kill each other. Certain African nations like Somalia and CAR are lost causes.

In my opinion, international intervention prolong conflict. It is more like two people squabbling publicly. If someone tries to resolve their fight, they start fighting even more fiercely.
 
.
Hear,hear ! More muslim nations should join the french and the EU for the peacekeeping effort.An international effort should be mustered to keep those savages (i'm sry but they are! both sides !) from killing each other.Yes,Turkey,Saudi Arabia,UAE,Indonesia (the most prosperous ones today) i mean you.



Why not? hadn't NATO once took a military action against a " Christian " country in favor of Muslim freedom fighters?

Similarly, some " Muslim " countries took side against a " Muslim " Gov't in Sudan, in favor of " Christian " victims. Same happened in Libya on both sides.

I believe the point @Cherokee was trying to make is that regardless of who the victims were in this conflict remain victims regardless of who they're.

Or just don't interfere in any way. Let them kill each other. Certain African nations like Somalia and CAR are lost causes.

In my opinion, international intervention prolong conflict. It is more like two people squabbling publicly. If someone tries to resolve their fight, they start fighting even more fiercely.

I hear you.

But why can't we adopt the same action we took against Serbia? Launching a couple of airstrikes rather than a full scale invasion which I believe is a lost cause.
 
.
I hear you.

But why can't we adopt the same action we took against Serbia? Launching a couple of airstrikes rather than a full scale invasion which I believe is a lost cause.

Serbia even at it's worst was never ever even remotely close to African countries around equator. I consider them lost causes because there in no good side in those conflicts. Rest of the world cannot interfere in favour of one side as everyone here is a champion in genocide. It is better to let them fight each other.
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom