A joint military offensive between the
armed forces of the Central African Republic (CAR) and Chad to oust
Chad’s Front Populaire pour le Redressement (FPR) rebel movement from
its stronghold in parts of north-central CAR is hampering operations to
help the displaced, say humanitarian officials.
The military operation, which was launched on 23 January, is aimed at
capturing FPR rebel leader “General” Abdel Kader, alias Baba Laddé, and
is concentrated in the north-central CAR areas of Ouandago and Gondava,
80km and 45km from the main town of Kaga-Bandoro, respectively.
But following a 24 January joint attack on FPR positions, an estimated 16,000 people were displaced, according to
a bulletin by CAR's Humanitarian and Development Partnership Team (HDPT).
"This number is likely to change since some regions still remain inaccessible," it added.
The area most affected is Kabo, where internally displaced persons
(IDPs) need water and latrines, states the bulletin, noting that IDPs
had also been registered in the areas of Nana Outa and Farazala and
between Kabo and Kaga-Bandoro.
On 28 January, Firmin Feindiro, the CAR government spokesman, said the
military operations were targeting the FPR's operational centre and had
led to rebel casualties after a brief resistance. The exact toll,
however, remained unknown, with Laddé still free; reports suggest he
could have fled to South Sudan.
Kaga-Bandoro's bishop, Albert Vanbuel, was quoted in the media in early
February as saying the counter-rebel operations had led to a generalized
fear among the population as Chadian troops combed the area for FPR
rebels. "They stop the so-called rebels, torture and kill them without
knowing if they are rebels or not. Many innocent [people] have died this
way."
Bishop Vanbuel further added that FPR and civilian deaths had been recorded, with many corpses unburied.
Several villages in the northern part of CAR, on the road between
Ouandago and Gondava, have been partially or completely destroyed since
the end of January, according to
a 23 February statement by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
"Thousands of people have had to flee," said Katharina Ritz, head of the
ICRC delegation in Bangui. "They've lost everything: their houses,
their crops, all their belongings."
Insecurity continues to pose a threat to the population and humanitarian
organizations, despite the military operation, according to Jean
Sebastien Munie, head of the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in the CAR. "If the military operation was
on the whole a success, it did not completely eradicate insecurity in
the region."
The FPR rebels
,
who arrived in CAR from Chad in 2008, have continued to carry out
sporadic attacks in parts of northern CAR as well as to recruit, mainly
Fulani community members, and acquire weapons. On 2 February, an ethnic
Fulani herder, suspected of belonging to the FPR, was killed by a
presidential guard in the capital Bangui. Another Fulani herder was
seriously wounded and a third reported missing.
In early February, the FPR announced that several groups, including the
Parti pour la Justice et le Développement (PJD), the Convention des
patriotes pour la justice et la paix (CPJP), the Union des forces
démocratiques pour le rassemblement (UFDR) and the Armée populaire pour
la restauration de la démocratie (APRD), whose leader Jean Jacques
Démafouth is under arrest, were to create an alliance to depose CAR
President François Bozizé. But the APRD, a former national rebel group,
denied involvement in the alliance.
The APRD and the UFDR signed peace accords with the CAR government in
2008, with members taking part in the demobilization, disarmament and
reintegration process, while the CPJP signed a ceasefire agreement in
2011.
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