More than 35,000 people are living on the 40-acre diocesan compound in Bossangoa, Central African Republic, seeking protection from rebels who are targeting Christians, the local bishop has said.
“The priests have been sharing their rooms in their private apartments,” said Bishop Nestor-Desire Nongo Aziagbia of Bossangoa, who visited Washington in mid-November. “The only place that has not been used is my private apartment.”
Bishop Nongo, said he closed the minor seminary, which is now used as a shelter, and the pastoral centre has been destroyed. He said the Catholic aid agency Caritas has an office in the compound, but people also live in the office.
The people began coming in early September to escape attacks by rebels of the Seleka alliance, most of whom are foreign mercenaries and do not speak the local language. The rebels are predominantly Muslim; Central African Republic is about 85 per cent Christian and 12 per cent Muslim.
Bishop Nongo said the US bishops’ Catholic Relief Services sent emergency help in mid-September, and the World Food Programme sent help in late September, “but it is not really enough”.
Most of the people in the diocesan compound are women and children, the bishop said. To protect their families, men do not stay, fearing they will be targeted by rebel soldiers.
The bishop said the women have been risking rape and attacks to go out to their farms to harvest food, but soon all the crops will be gone, and the next planting season is May and June.
The bishop was speaking on Tuesday after testifying about the situation before the House Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights and International Organisations. He said when he called his vicar general early that morning, he learned that during the previous night rebels had surrounded the diocesan compound and threatened those inside with a rocket attack.
Bishop Nongo added that he receives messages from villages about violence and abuse every day. The people are “turning to me” to solve their problems, but I’m not the government,” he said. He added that he passes along the information, but nothing happens.
In his testimony submitted to the House subcommittee, Bishop Nongo said Seleka was pitting the country’s Christian and Muslim citizens against each other.
“Seleka’s violent attacks have targeted Christian homes, schools and places of worship while sparing local Muslim communities and mosques, often only a short distance away,” he said. “Christian communities have now begun to set up self-defense militia to fight back. Sadly, there are reports that they are attacking Muslim communities in retribution.”
Since the March coup in which Seleka rebels overthrew the government, about 440,000 citizens have been displaced, the bishop said, “and no one knows how many people have died.”
“The road south to the capital, Bangui, over 200 miles away, is deserted,” he said in his testimony. “Villagers have fled to escape the attacks, mass killings, rape and plundering perpetrated by the roaming groups of Seleka militia,” who have divided up the country and established regional control.
He said interim president Michel Djotodia, who led the March coup, formally dissolved the Seleka alliance in an effort to end the violence, but “he has no formal army to enforce peace and security.”
The bishop urged congressional leaders to work with France, the African Union and the UN to provide immediate assistance to help secure the country and “compel Seleka forces to disarm, demobilise and reintegrate into society or return to their home countries.”
He also asked them to fund humanitarian assistance and a “transition process to a legitimate, democratically elected government.” He noted the country would need continued assistance for years and asked them to rally the international community.
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