GENEVA
A wave of violence
gripping the Central African Republic has killed nearly 40 people and
forced close to 30,000 to flee their homes in a matter of days, the
United Nations said Tuesday.
"We fear that the violence
that we're seeing in Bangui is a return to the dark days of late 2013
and 2014, when thousands were killed and tens of thousands had to flee
their homes," UN refugee agency spokesman Leo Dobbs told reporters.
"We're
particularly concerned about gaining access to the thousands of people
who have fled their homes since Saturday," he said, saying at least 36
had been killed and 27,400 people had been displaced.
Rupert
Colville, a spokesman for the UN rights agency, meanwhile said at least
37 had died in the violence and 100 others had been injured.
Bangui's
latest round of violence broke out on Saturday after claims a
motorcycle-taxi driver was murdered in central Bangui's Muslim-majority
PK-5 neighbourhood.
PK-5 neighbourhood was the
epicentre of unprecedented killings between Christians and Muslims in
Bangui in late 2013 and early last year. It remains the last bastion for
Muslims hounded from other districts by Christian "anti-balaka"
militias.
Dobbs said around 10,000 of those who had
been displaced had taken refuge at Bangui international airport, which
had already been hosting around 11,000 people, he said.
"There
is great difficulty getting to the airport. There are barricades in the
streets and there was shooting going on this morning," he said.
"The
displaced people are reported to be in a state of shock," he said,
pointing out that many of them had been forced to flee their homes
previously.
Colville meanwhile said some 500 prisoners had escaped from Bangui's main prison late Monday.
"This
is a huge setback for the preservation of law and order, and for the
fight against impunity, which has been and remains a chronic problem in
CAR," he told reporters.
Colville urged the country's
transitional government and international actors to "urgently stop what
appears to be a deliberate attempt to derail the current peace process
and important progress made in CAR over the last 18 months."
Central
African Republic descended into bloodshed more than two years ago after
Muslim militia ousted longtime leader Francois Bozize, triggering the
worst crisis since independence in 1960.
The country
since has remained prey to violence between the mostly Muslim Seleka
fighters and Christian militias known as the "anti-balaka", or
anti-machete.
French soldiers and UN peacekeepers
remain in the former French colony, where thousands of people died in
the violence and hundreds of thousands remain displaced from their homes
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