More than 200,000 flee 'apocalyptic' conflict in Central African
Republic
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[January 30, 2021]
By Emma Farge
GENEVA (Reuters) - More than 200,000 people
have fled fighting in the Central African Republic (CAR) since violence
erupted over a December election result, the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR)
said on Friday, with nearly half crossing into the Democratic Republic
of Congo.
The CAR army, backed by U.N., Russian and Rwandan troops, has been
battling rebels seeking to overturn a Dec. 27 vote in which President
Faustin-Archange Touadera was declared the winner.
"Refugees have told UNHCR that they fled in panic when they heard gun
shots, leaving their belongings behind," spokesman Boris Cheshirkov told
journalists in Geneva.
The nation of nearly five million people, larger than mainland France,
Belgium and Luxemburg combined and rich in diamonds, timber and gold,
has struggled to find stability since a 2013 rebellion ousted former
president Francois Bozize.
The current fighting between a coalition of militias on the one side and
the national army and its backers on the other was sparked by a
Constitutional Court decision to bar Bozize's candidacy in the Dec. 27
presidential election.
Former prime minister Martin Ziguele, who came third in the Dec. 27
election, said on Friday there was fighting across the country every
day, preventing movement between towns, and pushing more people to flee.
"Everyone is focused on the main transport route between the capital and
eastern Cameroon for supplies, but inside the country, there is no
movement," Ziguele told Reuters by phone from Bangui.
"I cannot leave Bangui and go 90 km (60 miles) without a heavily-armed
army escort. Imagine then the population. Add the curfew and the state
of emergency, it is really an apocalyptic situation," Ziguele said.
In a statement on Friday, the International Conference on the Great
Lakes Region, a regional body of 12 member states, called for a
ceasefire and urged armed groups to "disengage from the encirclement of
Bangui" and allow people and goods to move freely.
The body will also ask the United Nations Security Council to lift an
arms embargo imposed on CAR that has restricted the flow of weapons to
the army since 2013.
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A woman who fled the violent rebellion in Central African Republic
(CAR) sits with her family as they wait for their identification
process in the border town of Garoua Boulai, Cameroon January 7,
2021. REUTERS/Joel Kouam/File Photo
SEX FOR FOOD
About 92,000 refugees have reached DRC and more than 13,000 have
crossed into Cameroon, Chad and the Republic of Congo. The rest are
displaced inside the Central African Republic, the UNHCR said.
Ongoing attacks have hampered humanitarian access, the main road
used to bring supplies has been forced to shut inside the country,
and many are now facing "dire conditions", UNHCR's Cheshirkov said.
Some of the displaced are so desperate they have agreed to sex in
return for food, he added. Malaria, respiratory tract infections,
and diarrhoea have become common.
He also voiced concern about the reported presence of armed groups
in the Batangafo and Bria camps for the displaced.
"Those armed groups are trying in some cases to restrict movements
and in some cases forcibly recruit. So this is a very concerning
situation," he told the briefing.
Ziguele said that while a substantial increase in peacekeepers, as
requested by the U.N. envoy in Bangui, was welcomed, a dialogue
between all parties was urgently needed.
"A military surge is not the only solution to tackle the security,
humanitarian and economic crisis that is threatening to put one of
the world's least developed countries into a complete coma," he
said.
(Reporting by Emma Farge; Additional reporting by Bate Felix in
Dakar; Editing by Philippa Fletcher and Daniel Wallis)
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