Media urged to pay more attention to CAR violence

Central African Republic (CAR)

FILE PHOTO: People fleeing from violence in Central African Republic.

FILE PHOTO: People fleeing from violence in Central African Republic.

The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has warned of the consequences of the media looking away from what it termed the ‘dramatic’ rise in violence in the Central African Republic (CAR).

Donaig Le Du, spokesperson for the UNICEF, said at a press briefing from Geneva on Tuesday, that the rising violence in CAR was “happening out of media eyes”.

The CAR has spiraled into violence and remains one of the worst countries in the world to be a child and “right now there are few eyes looking at them and few hands trying to help,” she said.

Du regretted that “the past year, and especially the last quarter, has seen a dramatic increase in violence.

“There are now an estimated 600,000 internally displaced people, up from 440,000 at the end of April – a big increase in the past two to three months,” she said.

“And there are still 480,000 CAR refugees in neighbouring countries. So out of an estimated population of a little over five million, one in five is either a refugee or displaced, half of them children,” Le Du added.

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UNICEF, however, noted that as the country spiraled into violence, Bangui, the capital, was quiet saying “the roads are bad, and with the rainy season and insecurity, it becomes nearly impossible to travel. There is limited cell phone coverage”.

She gave the example of six Red Cross volunteers whose deaths were not reported until after two weeks after they were killed in Gambo, earlier this month.

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The spokesperson explained that beyond Bangui, two-thirds of the country is controlled by armed groups adding, “in the cities and villages that were recently affected by violence, that means that schools are closed. That teachers don’t dare to go to schools”.

“Several NGOs have retreated, which means no health care. Supplies are looted – at one health centre, solar panels were stolen from solar fridges for example, which means no immunizations,” Le Du elaborated.

Horrendous reports on children’s rights violations have surfaced over the past months and weeks, the UNICEF spokesperson said.

“Precise numbers are impossible to know but we know for a fact that children have been killed; there have been incidents of sexual violence, and that recruitment into armed groups is happening.

“But there are less direct violations with lasting consequences – having to flee or take refuge in the bush; having no education or health care,” she said.

One specificity of the CAR conflict showed little fighting between armed groups, which instead attack civilians on the other side and increasingly target the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission and humanitarian actors.

An open letter to the UN Secretary-General from major international NGOs identifies the CAR as the most dangerous country in the world to deliver humanitarian assistance – with the world’s highest level of violence against humanitarian workers, accounting for one-third of all incidents targeting aid workers.

The CAR is also the world’s least developed country, placing 188th out of the 188 countries on the Human Development Index “but the world cannot abandon CAR’s children – and right now there are few eyes looking at them and few hands trying to help,” Le Du said.

As of end-July, UNICEF’s $46.3 million humanitarian appeal for CAR children was 42 per cent funded. Having been revised up to $52.8 million, it now has a 63 per cent funding gap.

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