France and the Militarization of Central Africa: Thousands of Muslims Fleeing the Central African Republic
GOOD MAYBE THE DUMB ASSES IN THIS NATION WILL DO THE SAME THING WITH THE ISLAMIC TERRORIST IN THIS NATION HOPE THEY START AT THE WHITE HOUSE
Unrest is continuing in the
mineral-rich state of the Central African Republic as French and African
Union (AU) peacekeeping troops are patrolling the capital of Bangui and
other areas. France has announced that it will be deploying an
additional 400 troops to its former colony.
Also the European Union (EU) has
committed to sending in 1,000 of its soldiers as attacks against Muslims
are resulting in more injuries and deaths. Tens of thousands of people
in the Islamic community have fled the country or re-located to
internally displaced persons camps.
The government of interim President
Catherine Samba-Panza has pledged to put a halt to the targeted violence
against Muslims. Several leaders of the anti-Balaka militias have been
arrested.
According to the Associated Press
“Officials in Central African Republic say 11 men including leaders of the Christian anti-Balaka militia have been transferred to the capital’s main prison.
The men were detained during a disarmament program Saturday.” (February 17)
This article continues saying “They are
the first prisoners taken into custody by the government of transitional
President Catherine Samba-Panza. Justice Minister Isabelle Gaudeuille
declined to name the suspects or specify the allegations against them.
But Jean-Pierre Sadou of the African peacekeeping mission said they
included multiple anti-Balaka leaders.”
The anti-Balaka militias grew up among
the majority Christian population in the CAR in response to atrocities
committed by the Muslim-dominated Seleka Coalition which seized power in
March 2013. Seleka was led by Michel Djotodia, who served as interim
president from March 2013 to January of this year.
Djotodia was forced from office due to
external pressure from France and Chad. A regional summit was convened
in N’Djamena which resulted in the removal of the interim regime headed
by Seleka.
Muslims Halted Seeking to Leave the Fighting
Tens of thousands of Muslims are being
forced out of the CAR. Some of these residents are nationals of Chad and
Sudan but others are citizens of the country.
Muslims inside the CAR are heavily
involved in trade. As a result of these attacks the economic situation
inside the country is worsening because of the looting of shops and the
shortages of food and consumer goods.
An article in the Economist quoted a CAR
citizen saying that “Traders have mostly left as there is little
security at the markets. The cattle-herders have fled to the bush so
there is very little meat, making it extremely expensive for us to buy.
With few means of making money, we are in trouble,” said Elodie
Nguerele, a Christian who teaches in Bangui, the capital. (Feb. 15)
This same report also notes that “Less
than a quarter of the wholesalers who import food from neighboring
countries remain in Bangui, according to aid agencies. Attacks on
Muslims may encourage the rest to flee. Residents in Bangui say that
supplies of sugar and flour are critically short. The prices for staples
are soaring. According to the UN, 1.3m of the country’s 4.6m people
need food aid urgently.”
On February 14, hundreds of Muslims in
car caravans sought to leave the capital of Bangui but were halted by
anti-Balaka forces threatening to kill them. African peacekeeping forces
from Burundi ordered the convoy back to local mosques fearing further
clashes that would lead to more injuries and deaths.
Mass graves have been uncovered in the
capital and other regions of the country. Estimates of deaths in the
fighting since January are more than 1,000.
AU member-states have contributed to
the peacekeeping mission for the CAR known as MISCA. In early February
it was announced that over $300 million had been pledged to aid the
operation.
Nonetheless, the tensions within the
country remain extremely high. The process of transporting people
through the CAR to neighboring Chad and Cameroun is a very dangerous
task.
In the Bangui neighborhood of Miskine,
Muslims were threatened in their efforts to leave the capital. Mosques
have become safe-havens for the minority Islamic community that only
makes up 15 percent of the overall population of less than five million
in the CAR.
Lieutenant Rosana Nsengimana, of the
African peacekeeping force Misca, said: “The convoy escorted by
Burundian forces returned to its departure point because of a problem in
a neighborhood on the north end of the city where the Muslims would
have had to pass through.” There have been reports of people killed
based upon rumors and suspicions. (Guardian, UK, Feb. 14)
In a village in the northwest of the
country, an official of Amnesty International (AI) reported that
widespread targeting of Muslims had resulted in the burning of homes and
the killing of civilians including children. These ongoing attacks have
not built faith in the French and African military occupation forces
that are said to be acting as peacekeepers.
According to AI senior adviser
Donatella Rovera, “All the houses of the Muslim population had been
burned or looted and in one of the houses I found a little girl of about
11. She was the only Muslim survivor of the village: the others had
either fled or been killed. She was crouching in a corner. She had been
hiding there since the day of the massacre. She had not eaten or drunk
anything. She was terrified and could not stand at all.” (Guardian, Feb.
14)
The article goes on reporting that “She
said her father had been killed and her mother had been killed. She was
not speaking very much. There had not been any peacekeepers there at
all even though this place was a place that had already seen
confrontation between anti-balaka and Seleka forces earlier.”
French, EU and African Troops Are Proving to be Ineffective
Although the EU says that it is sending
in 1,000 troops and France will escalate its presence to 2,000, the
situation is not improving for the Muslim population or others in the
CAR. The inability of the interim government of President Samba-Panza to
re-organize the armed forces and the police is reflective of the
political vacuum prevailing for nearly a year.
France is increasing its military
presence in various African states including Mali, where they have had
troops for over a year in the north of the country. Although Paris
claimed that its invasion of Mali would only last for few months, more
than a thousand troops remain in an ostensible anti-terrorism operation.
Both Mali and the CAR have significant
deposits of diamonds, gold and uranium. In Niger, a major source of
uranium, the West African state is also being occupied by the Pentagon
and French troops since the mines there are being controlled by a firm
based in Paris, Areva.
In Libya, where French bombers carried
out attacks against the former government of Col. Muammar Gaddafi in
2011, the political and security situation is highly precarious. In
January loyalist forces took control of several towns in the southern
Libya and hoisted the green flag of the Jamahiriya under Gaddafi.
France recently suggested that it was
prepared to establish a “security zone” in southern Libya. However, the
foreign ministry soon withdrew this claim.
French public opinion is growing
strongly in opposition to its neo-colonial adventures in Africa. The
United States is supporting these efforts in Mali, the CAR and Libya,
where the Pentagon and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) along with
NATO coordinated the overthrow and destruction of the Gaddafi government
in 2011.
These imperialist interventions in
Africa will not bring peace and security, in fact they have done just
the opposite. In Mali, the intervention of the United States Africa
Command (AFRICOM) through training programs and direct monetary support
to soldiers, led to a military coup in March 2012.
Other European imperialist states such
as Germany are being prodding to enter the CAR as well. A recent
editorial in Deutsche Welle, the state-controlled media service, called
for greater involvement from the government of Angela Merkel.
Only when Africa establishes its own
independent military command can these internal conflicts be effectively
contained and halted. The ongoing imperialist system of neo-colonialism
continues to render the AU to a subordinate role in resolving the
economic, social and security crises that are mounting on the continent.
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