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CAR: Ban deplores recent attacks, urges end to violence
Photo: UNHCR/S. Phelps

CAR: Ban deplores recent attacks, urges end to violence

India Blooms News Service | | 30 May 2014, 12:06 pm
New York, May 30 (IBNS): United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Thursday strongly condemned the recent attacks in the Central African Republic (CAR) and encouraged the country's Transitional Authority to do everything within its means to prevent further violence and to hold the perpetrators to account.
“The Secretary-General calls for an immediate end to the cycle of violence and retaliatory attacks,” his spokesperson said, referring to fighting that broke out following a 2012 rebel-led coup and has since become more brutal with reports of ongoing human rights violations and clashes that have left 2.2 million in need of humanitarian aid.
 
Muslim rebels on Wednesday attacked Christians sheltering at the Church of Notre Dame de Fatima in Bangui, killing an unknown number of people, including the priest, and abducting others, according to a statement issued by the UN in New York.
 
The attack follows violence in the capital earlier in the week during which three Muslim youths were brutally killed by suspected anti-Balaka elements on their way to an inter-communal reconciliation football match.
 
In Thursday’s statement, Ban encouraged CAR leaders and partners in the sub-region to work with the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in CAR (MINUSCA) to work towards “meaningful national dialogue and reconciliation in order to chart a sustainable path to peace.”
 
He also called on the international forces present in the country to take all necessary measures in support of these efforts.
 
 
 (A man and his child walk through a crowded site for internally displaced people in the Central African Republic capital, Bangui, where many people remain at risk. Photo: UNHCR/S. Phelps)

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