Ethnic cleansing" is being carried out against Muslim civilians in
the Central African Republic, with international peacekeepers unable to
prevent it, Amnesty International said on Wednesday.
France's
defence minister earlier called on international forces deployed in the
Christian-majority country to put an end to attacks by the militias "by
force if needed".
Amnesty said it had documented at least 200
killings of Muslim civilians by Christian militia groups known as the
anti-balaka, set up in the wake of the March 2013 coup by the
mainly-Muslim Seleka rebellion.
"'Ethnic cleansing' of Muslims has
been carried out in the western part of the Central African Republic,
the most populous part of the country, since early January 2014,"
Amnesty International said in a report.
"Entire Muslim communities
have been forced to flee, and hundreds of Muslim civilians who have not
managed to escape have been killed by the loosely organised militias
known as anti-balaka."
The group said attacks against Muslims had
been committed "with the stated intent to forcibly displace these
communities from the country," with many anti-balaka fighters viewing
Muslims as "'foreigners' who should leave the country or be killed".
"They appear to be achieving their aims, with Muslims being forced out of the country in increasingly large numbers," it said.
The
impoverished country descended into chaos last March after the
rebellion overthrew the government, sparking deadly violence that has
uprooted a million people out of a population of 4.6 million.
Atrocities,
the fear of attacks and a lack of food have displaced a quarter of the
country's population, while the United Nations and relief agencies
estimate that at least two million people need humanitarian assistance.
The
landlocked country has been prone to coups, rebellions and mutinies for
decades, but the explosion in interreligious violence is unprecedented.
Amnesty
urged international peacekeeping forces in the country to "take rapid
steps to break anti-balaka control over the country's road network, and
to station sufficient troops in towns where Muslims are threatened".
It called for international troops to be granted the necessary
resources to achieve this, warning of a "tragedy of historic
proportions" that could set a precedent for other countries in the
region struggling with sectarian or ethnic conflict.
There are
currently 5,300 African Union troops operating under a UN mandate in the
former French colony, and the force is expected to reach 6,000 by
March.
France has deployed 1,600 troops, while the EU has promised
to deploy 500 troops at the beginning of March and the United States is
providing logistical support.
France's defence minister Jean-Yves
Le Drian said last week that while the presence of French troops had
brought back some stability to the capital Bangui, it had not done so
for the rest of the country.
During a visit Tuesday to Brazzaville
in Congo, Le Drian said that "all militias who continue to be involved
in mob violence and commit murder must stop".
French troops and
the African Union-led support mission in CAR must "implement the UN
resolutions, by force if needed", he added.
Congolese President
Denis Sassou Nguesso, who is a mediator in the conflict, said for his
part: "It is the duty of the international community to act with more
firmness and diligence to end the reign of barbarism."
In New
York, UN chief Ban Ki-Moon told reporters: "The sectarian brutality is
changing the country's demography. The de facto partition of the C.A.R.
is a distinct risk."
He added: "The international response does not yet match the gravity of the situation.
"We
must do more to prevent more atrocities, protect civilians, restore law
and order, provide humanitarian assistance and hold the country
together."
No comments:
Post a Comment