Video: Central African Republic, Massacre of Muslims
February 20, 2014 (CMAJ) — The Central African Republic’s deep and extremely violent sectarian crisis has been effectively abandoned by the international community, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) charged at a Feb. 11 media teleconference.
I’ve never seen such a high level of violence,” said Dr. Joanne Liu, MSF international president. “This needs to be addressed now.” The Montréal, Quebec physician criticized the “shocking lack of engagement and mobilization” from political leaders in the United Nations (UN) Security Council, and the limited response from African countries and the African Union to the crisis in the Central African Republic (CAR).
In the past few months, close to 100 000 Muslims have fled the country, primarily to neighbouring Chad and Cameroon; another 900 000 to 1 million are internally displaced. MSF knows of some 15 000 trapped in hospitals, churches or mosques, living in fear of being killed by armed groups, unable to go home.
“The Muslim population is much more targeted right now,” said Liu, who recently visited CAR where she was head of mission in 2012. “They cannot move freely and a lot decide to flee.” Among these were MSF’s four Muslim staff in Bangui, CAR’s capital. After they left, their houses were destroyed.
Liu says there has been a lot of discussion on how to qualify what’s going on. Liu says that it isn’t genocide. “No one is encouraging people to attack their neighbours,” she said.
While the death toll is unknown, stories of atrocities, such as lynching and drowning, are emerging. An online video on Feb. 7 shows the brutal mob-slaying of a Muslim man who tumbled from an overcrowded truck while fleeing Bangui.
International aid has ramped up; there are now 5500 peacekeepers in the country from the African Union (4000) and France (1500). Recently, the European Union announced it will send 500 soldiers and France will send another 400 to its former colony.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the Security Council on Feb. 14 that the UN must live up to the promises to “act swiftly and robustly in the face of such bloodshed.” In December, the UN upped CAR to a level 3 world emergency, the highest level.
“We had a lot of hope for fast-track aid,” says Liu. Two months later, “this has not materialized in the field.”
“This is a huge failure of protection and assistance,” adds MSF Canada President, Dr. Stephen Cornish, who visited CAR Jan. 7-15. “We’re hearing great words coming from many places, but not seeing the action on the street.”
“We’re a witness to this. This is our responsibility, to speak out.”
About 80% of CAR’s 4.6-million residents are Christian, with a sizeable Muslim population concentrated in the long-marginalized north near the borders of Sudan and Chad. The Muslim people’s grievances are political and economic, not religious, but fighting has increasingly taken sectarian tone since a coup in March 2013. At that time, an alliance of Muslim-led rebel groups from the North called Séléka, toppled the 10-year-old government. Christian rebels, called Anti-Balaka (anti-machete), retaliated; Muslim activists hit back. Civilians have been caught in the cross-fire and now some appear to be actively engaged.
The fighting escalated following street battles after Dec. 5 between these two rebel groups in the capital city of Bangui. Since then, MSF has treated more than 3600 wounded people.
Patients are scared
MSF has 250 international and 1800 local staff in 16 locations in CAR, making it the organization’s third largest project. MSF is likely the biggest humanitarian aid presence in CAR. These days, its priority is treating the wounded, as well as hiding and protecting patients.
“When we’re absent, our patients are at risk, which is unusual,” said Liu.
As an example, she tells a story that took place In the city of Bozoum. MSF staff were called to a small courtyard where 17 people with wounds from gunshots, machetes and a grenade were hiding. “They were too scared to go to the hospital in case they were targeted again,” says Liu. “Their injuries were serious, yet they were all sitting in silence, bleeding. That’s how terrified people are of seeking medical care.”
Given that fear, MSF has decentralized health care, delivering it through mobile clinics or health points, as well as within displaced persons’ camps.
MSF reports that the extreme violence has reached unprecedented levels in recent weeks. In the first ten days of February, 9000 Muslims fled to Cameroon. Towns on the north-south axis were looted and there were rumours of village attacks, according to Heather Thomas, a nurse practitioner from Ottawa, Ontario who was MSF’s medical coordinator in CAR until Jan. 21. Thomas has witnessed the aftermath of towns being burnt and seen pockets of people living in the bush, constantly on the move.
“Totally barbaric”
In Bangui, some 413 000 people are living in makeshift sites. About 100 000 Christians are living at Mpoko airport inside an abandoned hanger surrounded by derelict aircraft with less than four litres of water per person per day when the norm is 20, and few sanitary facilities.
“Their conditions are appalling,” says Dr. Amos Hercz, a general internist from Montréal who worked in CAR in January. “It’s 35 degrees, there’s no water, no latrines. Helicopters are taking off and landing. It’s a surreal environment in which to expect humans to exist.”
MSF set up a clinic in the shade of the wing of a decommissioned Russian transport plane, offering primary care and treating the wounded, said Hercz. The wounds included burns from cars that had caught fire, collisions and machete lacerations. He saw an individual who was flayed with electrical cables.
The airport also houses a camp for a few thousand Muslims awaiting flights out of the country. These people have substantial health needs, says Hercz. Most were injured on the way to the airport; either their convoy was attacked or they got caught in crossfire.
Hercz recalls a woman arriving with infected machete wounds across her face and burns across her torso and breasts. She was trying to breastfeed her child. The woman had been attacked in a convoy headed out of town. The situation is “totally barbaric,” says Hercz.
Prior to the March coup, MSF provided primary care and supported local hospitals, mainly for complicated maternity cases, and sometimes emergency and nutritional support. Staff in Bangui had quite a nice life, with a gym and pool, drinks at the hotel and restaurants. It used to be an ideal mission for training new staff. Less than a year later, it’s all gone, says Hercz. Gone too are schools, sanitation and a functioning police force.
“Things are a shambles,” says Hercz, who has also worked for MSF in Haiti, Ethiopia and the Republic of Congo. “It’s the most unstable situation I’ve seen as an MSF doctor.”
Not surprisingly, basic medical services, such as the provision of vaccines, are hard to come by. And that’s a problem in a country where, despite the violence, malaria remains the number one killer. CAR has malaria year-round; at peak rainy season, due in May, up to 90% of the population can test positive. Among the 400 000 people in the city of Bossangoa, about 1000 die annually of malaria; 60% of those are under age 5, says Thomas. And since MSF provides services in Bossangoa, its rates are lower than elsewhere.
Thomas says MSF is also seeing severe malnutrition in patients in that city. That may spread as many farmers have fled. Crops are due to be planted in a month.
“It’s all fallen apart,” says Thomas. “With the coup, our work is gone. It’s frustrating.
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