International health NGO Medecins sans Frontieres (Doctors without
Borders) says the population of the Central African Republic has been
"abandoned" to a humanitarian emergency "just when they most need help",
and that the country's healthcare system has collapsed.
With most NGOs and aid agencies withdrawing to the capital Bangui,
citing security concerns, MSF said in a July 9 report that the
international community has failed to do enough to end the country's
crisis.
Several Christian organisations in the country have attempted to provide help, even as some have been looted by rebels.
The republic was plunged into chaos after a rebel coalition called
Séléka overthrew the regime of François Bozizé in March, forcing him to
flee the country.
Numerous acts of violence by the rebels have created a
climate of tension and fear across the country.
The International
Federation for Human Rights reports that Séléka rebels have been accused
of more than 400 killings since the rebel group came to power.
The coup followed years of unrest, leading to what the BBC
characterised as a "crisis on top of a crisis".
It reported that
"hundreds of armed men who helped rebel President Michel Djotodia shoot
his way to power in March, and who are mostly unpaid, now loot at will
and shoot civilians who try to stop them".
Rebels have attacked and looted hospitals and MSF says the health
system is so devastated it is a "phantom system that cannot be said to
function".
When people try to escape armed attack and flee into the bush, they
have no protection from mosquitoes.
MSF reports 33 per cent more cases
of malaria being reported this year than in the same period last year.
In the midst of the crisis, the Alliance of Evangelical Churches and
the Catholic charity Saint Vincent de Paul, have held a donation event
aimed at helping the victims of violence and looting.
The donations' initiative seeks to create a surge of solidarity
towards the victims, Saint Vincent de Paul President Clemence Akondia
told World Watch Monitor by telephone.
''We are sensitive to the suffering of the population", she said.
"People of all ages were victims of looting and violence perpetrated by
rebels. Some families have lost everything. We seek to help them
regardless of their religious or ethnic affiliation".
The donations are mainly of clothes, household tools, beds,
mattresses and cash, which Akondia said will allow providing emergency
assistance to victims.
With help from local representatives, the Alliance of Evangelical
Churches and Saint Vincent de Paul expect to gather statistics on
damages inflicted by rebels across the country.
An operation of disarmament was launched by the authorities with the
help of the regional military force, but violence has not completely
ceased. On June 28, Séléka members attacked and ransacked two
evangelical organisations in Bangui in broad daylight.
The two
organisations are the Bible Society in Central Africa — an
inter-denominational institution specialising in distribution of
Christian literature — and the Protestant Centre for Youth, which hosts
an institute of theology, a number of private schools, and a conference
room.
Twenty-nine 29 boxes of Bibles were torn and scattered on the ground,
and four computers and printers and other furniture were taken. An
estimated $2,000 in cash was stolen from the Bible Society office.
''This is an unfortunate event because this place belongs to God,"
the Bible Society's managing director, Pastor Gaston Kossingou, told
Word Watch Monitor. "The looting committed by Séléka rebels defies
God.''
The looting occurred amid tension throughout Bangui that followed the
death of a young student, reportedly killed by Séléka rebels in the
Gobongo area. Under the pretext of taking out barriers erected by some
youths on the highway, Séléka members attacked an undetermined number of
properties, including the two religious institutions.
The looting of the Central Africa Bible Society also came on the eve
of an official dedication ceremony of the translation of the Bible into
Sangho, the main language in the Central African Republic.
And it cast a
shadow on reconciliation efforts begun a month ago by Christian and
Muslim leaders who agreed to work together on solutions to the growing
unrest.
Since then, reports say a relative calm has prevailed in Bangui, but the fear of new acts of violence remains real.