PANAPRESS
Panafrican News Agency
CAR: UN official calls for more aid as fresh violence empties CAR city
Bria, Central African Republic (PANA) - A senior UN official has called for additional humanitarian aid in the Central African Republic (CAR), where nearly the entire population of the city of Bria was forcibly displaced last week.
The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that more than 41,000 people were forced out of their homes in “unprecedented violence between rival armed groups” between 15 and 18 May.
In those days, people searching for protection flooded seven sites for internally displaced camps, among them one near a base for the UN peacekeeping force in the country (MINUSCA).
“With the emergence of an ethnic dimension to the conflict, hundreds of houses were burned, property looted and ransacked,” said OCHA.
The resurgence of the last outbreaks of tension in the past two weeks has caused the displacement of about 100,000 people, 200 wounded and 300 dead, according to the CAR Ministry of Social Health.
Echoing the Government's concerns, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator in the country, Najat Rochdi, expressed concern at “this new outbreak of violence where civilian people are paying the highest cost.”
A lack of sufficient shelters is the main concern, as CAR is now in a rainy season, following by the need for food and clean water.
OCHA said that shelters and food rations have been conveyed from Bangui and Bambari to Bria, but insecurity and the poor conditions of roads have delayed their arrival. The humanitarian community is also working to meet the needs in terms of supply of drinking water and sanitation.
Diseases are also increasing, spread by “promiscuity and poor hygiene,” OCHA said as the senior UN official called for additional resources.
Halfway through the year, funding for the US$ 399.5 million Humanitarian Response Plan is only at US$ 64.8 million.
CAR is emerging from civil conflict which began in 2013, with clashes between the mainly Muslim Séléka rebel coalition and anti-Balaka militia, which are mostly Christian.
-0- PANA VAO 26May2017
The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that more than 41,000 people were forced out of their homes in “unprecedented violence between rival armed groups” between 15 and 18 May.
In those days, people searching for protection flooded seven sites for internally displaced camps, among them one near a base for the UN peacekeeping force in the country (MINUSCA).
“With the emergence of an ethnic dimension to the conflict, hundreds of houses were burned, property looted and ransacked,” said OCHA.
The resurgence of the last outbreaks of tension in the past two weeks has caused the displacement of about 100,000 people, 200 wounded and 300 dead, according to the CAR Ministry of Social Health.
Echoing the Government's concerns, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator in the country, Najat Rochdi, expressed concern at “this new outbreak of violence where civilian people are paying the highest cost.”
A lack of sufficient shelters is the main concern, as CAR is now in a rainy season, following by the need for food and clean water.
OCHA said that shelters and food rations have been conveyed from Bangui and Bambari to Bria, but insecurity and the poor conditions of roads have delayed their arrival. The humanitarian community is also working to meet the needs in terms of supply of drinking water and sanitation.
Diseases are also increasing, spread by “promiscuity and poor hygiene,” OCHA said as the senior UN official called for additional resources.
Halfway through the year, funding for the US$ 399.5 million Humanitarian Response Plan is only at US$ 64.8 million.
CAR is emerging from civil conflict which began in 2013, with clashes between the mainly Muslim Séléka rebel coalition and anti-Balaka militia, which are mostly Christian.
-0- PANA VAO 26May2017