HRW Urges UN to Sanction CAR's Seleka
FILE
- Fighters of the Seleka rebel coalition stand in front of the
presidential palace in Bangui, Central African Republic, March 25, 2013.
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Margaret Besheer
September 18, 2013
UNITED NATIONS — Human Rights Watch is
calling on the U.N. Security Council to sanction leaders of the Central
African Republic’s Seleka coalition. The group seized power in March and
killed and raped civilians, burned villages and looted property as it
took control of the country’s provinces.
HRW says the Central African Republic has become a forgotten crisis. With the launch Wednesday of its new report on the situation there, the New York-based group urges the international community to urgently address the situation.
The group conducted field research from April to June, documenting cases
of human rights abuses and identifying patterns of violence committed
by Seleka. HRW also obtained satellite imagery confirming the
destruction of villages.
Lewis Mudge is the report’s author. He made several trips to the
country, where he found hundreds of homes destroyed by Seleka and heard
witness accounts of abuses.
“In this case, the Seleka actually made my job quite easy," he said.
"When I met with Seleka leaders outside of the capital, they were quite
honest and open with me about how they had burned villages and how they
had targeted civilians. They looked me in the eye and they said to my
face, ‘Yes, this was us.’”
Mudge said this highlights the impunity with which Seleka operates. He
noted they do not have the support of the population, which lives in
fear of them.
While the report focuses on abuses committed by Seleka, it does recount
some severe violations of detainees by security agents working for
former president François Bozizé. The president was overthrown by Seleka
in March.
The report makes numerous recommendations, including that the CAR
government stop tolerating attacks on civilians, investigate abuses and
start holding perpetrators accountable.
Mudge said the Security Council also must act, before the country descends into complete chaos.
“Currently the Seleka leaders are operating under the assumption there
is no threat because nobody is paying attention. But we do feel the
Security Council could do something about this," he said. "They could
put certain Seleka leaders who are found to be committing human rights
abuses on the sanctions list. It will send a strong message to the
Seleka that the world is starting to pay attention and that the world is
watching.”
United Nations humanitarian and human rights officials have been warning
about the CAR’s instability for months. They say that while security in
the capital, Bangui, has improved, in the rest of the country the state
is almost non-existent. The humanitarian crisis is growing and
insecurity threatens to spread beyond the country’s borders.
African countries have sent more than 1,000 peacekeepers to the Central
African Republic to protect civilians. That number is expected to grow
to more than 3,500 under African Union auspices.
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