Home » Projects » EMERGENCY » Central African Republic – renewed violence – Catholic bishop acts to shield Muslims

Central African Republic – renewed violence – Catholic bishop acts to shield Muslims

Effects of the violence are also being felt in other dioceses, says Bishop Cyr-Nestor of Alindao

Königstein/Madrid, 18.05.2017 ACN. – Spanish missionary Bishop Juan José Aguirre of Bangassou in the Central African Republic, has denounced the outbreak of revenge violence against Muslims in his city by the Anti-balaka, a group of mainly animist and anti-Muslim guerrillas. He was speaking to the Spanish office of the international Catholic pastoral charity and pontifical foundation Aid to the Church in Need (ACN)

“They attacked Bangassou and the Moroccan soldiers of the UN forces called on all the Muslims to leave their quarters and go to the mosque. As a result, the mosque was packed full. They started to attack them and shoot at them; they were three days without eating or washing”, Bishop Aguirre told ACN. “I myself went there to stand in front of the mosque and persuade them to stop shooting. But they killed the Imam. We organised lorries so that we could carry them to the buildings of the Catholic Church.”

The bishop confirmed that the Catholic Church is at present sheltering some 2,000 Muslim refugees in its centres in Bangassou, in the southeast of the country. “We are sheltering them in my own house, and we have reorganised the minor seminary, the cathedral and some other churches. The UN forces are taking steps to organise food deliveries and to set up tents for the refugees.”

Also present at the time in Bangassou, together with Bishop José Aguirre, is Cardinal Nzapalainga of Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic. “Together with him we are engaged in dialogue with the local chieftains to stop the people looting in the Muslim suburbs, which have been systematically attacked. And we are also negotiating with the Anti-balaka to persuade them to leave Bangassou. This is what we were negotiating about this afternoon”, Bishop Aguirre added.

“In the 35 years I have lived here I have never seen this inter-communitarian violence before. Ever since Chad sent in fighters of the Islamist Seleka alliance into Central Africa, we have been witnessing violence”, the bishop explained. “Now we have 2,000 people here who have no idea what has happened to their property, their homes; everything has been stolen from them. We have buried over 50 bodies, together with the Red Cross. We helped them with the vehicles of the Catholic mission.”

“Now we have to set up refugee camps for these homeless people, and on top of this the rainy season is just starting and we have to provide shelter for the people. But we hope and believe that one day they will be able to return to their homes and that there will be peace here once more”, Bishop Aguirre concluded.

Another Bishop, Mgr. Cyr-Nestor of the diocese of Alindao, which is also in the south of the Central African Republic, has likewise addressed a message to ACN, denouncing the new clashes between factions of the Seleka and the Anti-balaka, who are still present in the region.

The violence erupted on 8 May in response to the abduction and murder of several young people in Datoko by the Seleka. Following the intervention of UN troops, the situation appears to have calmed down for the moment. Nevertheless there are still around 5,000 refugees, who are currently being cared for in various centres of the Catholic Church, including the bishop’s house, the catechetical centre, a school and a convent. The diocese is beginning to have difficulties providing food and water for everyone and the priests are seeking help from the local population, given the lack of NGOs in the region.

ACN has offered help to the diocese of Alindao, where for the moment the local diocesan Caritas is addressing the most urgent needs.

Don't miss the latest updates!

“Religious persecution in Europe and the Americas has become a trend”

The number of churches attacked or vandalised in Europe and…

War brings both hope and despair to Lebanon

Archbishop Hanna Rahme, of Baalbek Deir El-Ahmar, in Lebanon, seeks…

Christians of Yaroun, southern Lebanon, fear they will never return home

The Christian residents of the south-Lebanese border town of Yaroun…

ACN mourns Syrian archbishop who never abandoned his flock

Archbishop Jeanbart believed that had it not been for the…

Remembering Sudan: A responsibility that we must all bear, not just the governments

A missionary warns that the world has forgotten about Sudan,…

Muslim solidarity is “sign of hope” in Mozambique, says bishop

The statement comes in the wake of a devastating attack…

Islamists reduce historic church to rubble in northern Mozambique

The attack on the parish of St Louis de Montfort…

Church has to be about more than feelings, says hurricane-dodging bishop

As secularism grows across the Caribbean and more young people drift away from the Church, Archbishop Gabriel Malzaire of Saint Lucia believes Christians must rediscover a deeper and more resilient...

“Religious persecution in Europe and the Americas has become a trend”

The number of churches attacked or vandalised in Europe and the Americas continues to rise, while Christians often lack the legal instruments to fight back against discrimination and persecution. An...

War brings both hope and despair to Lebanon

Archbishop Hanna Rahme, of Baalbek Deir El-Ahmar, in Lebanon, seeks to keep up evangelisation efforts, welcome refugees, live alongside the Shias and encourage hope in the midst of constant crises...