Christian militias in Central African Republic
have carried out ethnic cleansing of the Muslim population during the
country's ongoing civil war, but there is no proof there was genocidal
intent, a United Nations commission of inquiry has said.
"Thousands of people died as a result of the conflict.
Human rights violations and abuses were committed by all parties. The
Seleka coalition and the anti-balaka are also responsible for war crimes
and crimes against humanity," the inquiry said on Thursday.
"Although
the commission cannot conclude that there was genocide, ethnic
cleansing of the Muslim population by the anti-balaka constitutes a
crime against humanity," the report said.
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Interactive: The war across the river |
The final report of the inquiry, which was submitted to
the UN Security Council on December 19, said up to 6,000 people had been
killed though it "considers that such estimates fail to capture the
full magnitude of the killings that occurred". The
mostly Christian or animist "anti-balaka" militia took up arms in 2013
in response to months of looting and killing by mostly Muslim Seleka
rebels who had toppled President Francois Bozize and seized power in
March the same year. The UN Security Council established the commission of inquiry in December 2013.
Preventing violence
In
September 2014, the International Criminal Court opened an
investigation into allegations of murder, rape and the recruiting of
child soldiers in the Central African Republic.
Some
5,600 African Union peacekeepers, deployed in December 2013, and about
2,000 French troops have struggled to stem the violence in the
impoverished landlocked country of 4.6 million people. The
United Nations took over the African Union peacekeeping mission in
September and is mandated by the Security Council to double its size to
nearly 12,000 troops and police.
The UN commission
of inquiry said the deployment of the African Union peacekeepers, French
troops and then the UN peacekeeping mission (MINUSCA) had "been
primarily responsible for the prevention of an even greater explosion of
violence". |
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