Central
African Republic: Small steps to rebuilding lives
KAGA-BANDORO, 20 March 2008 (IRIN) -
After hiding in the
bush for more than a year, families in the northern Central African Republic
(CAR) regions of Ouaham and Nana Grebizi are starting to return to their
roadside villages.
Clashes between government forces
and the Armée Populaire pour
Such sudden large-scale population
movements took place across huge swathes of the north, with almost 200,000
civilians fleeing their homes.
It was not the actual battles
between soldiers and insurgents that prompted the flight as actions by
government troops to deny the rebels shelter and sanctuary.
Many people said the army considered
anyone left in the villages to be rebels.
"Tens of thousands of homes have
been burned to the ground .in different parts of northern CAR, with some
villages being completely destroyed during reprisals by armed forces," according
to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR).
"(A)rbitrary arrests, torture,
summary execution, forced recruitment, gender-based violence and looting of
private property" were also common, UNHCR stated in a briefing document.
Keen to stay close to their fields
of manioc and groundnuts, which provide the only livelihood for most, the
displaced tended to set up temporary homes close to their villages. In the
absence of many international humanitarian actors they survived as best they
could.
"When we conducted an assessment
mission here in December 2006, all of the villages on this road were totally
empty," Joseph Benamse of the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA), told IRIN.
"Even if people came back to their
villages to collect drinking water, they would run away as soon as they heard a
vehicle approaching," he added.
New beginnings
A few of the villages are still
abandoned but life has begun to return to most. All along the road, villagers
could be seen rebuilding their homes and laying new straw roofs, often not far
from APRD checkpoints manned by youths armed with crude hunting rifles.
"At first, about a year ago, some
people started coming back during the day," Maurice Daba, a resident of Waki II,
a village 34km southeast of Kabo, told IRIN.
"In October (2007) we began to move
back permanently after aid workers told us it was calm and most people have now
returned," added Daba.
Food is the most pressing concern.
"We did manage to plant last year but bandits (now the biggest security threat
across northern CAR) made it difficult to reach our crops so we were not able to
harvest much," said Daba.
"Now we don't have seeds to sow this
season. We will get some if we get money, but money is tight. I don't see how we
can get seeds before the rains start in a few weeks," he added.
Daba and other Waki villagers
survive on wild roots, some of which need to be soaked for a day before eating,
he explained, adding that the last time he had seen a food distribution was in
September 2007.
Residents of Bakaba, 18km northwest
of Kaga-Bandoro, told a similar tale of lacking seeds and tools for the coming
planting season and of having to survive on food they could forage from the
bush.
However, the soil in much of CAR is
very fertile, and bush meat provides an essential source of protein for many.
Mangos, papayas, grapefruits and oranges, which ripen at different times of the
year, have also helped to temper levels of acute malnutrition.
And the UN's World Food Programme
(WFP) is distributing in the area, either directly through schools or NGO
partners such as CARITAS, to some 30,000 displaced people in the Kago-Bandoro
area.
Help at hand
A recent surge in humanitarian
actors, from just five NGOs in 2006 to more than
A couple of thousand people living
along the Kabo-Kaga-Bandoro axis are benefiting from a cash-for-work road
rehabilitation scheme run by ACTED and Solidarité (which also distributes
essential seeds and tools along this road), with funding from the European
Commission's Humanitarian Office.
The International Rescue Committee
(IRC) and UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), with UNHCR, have been sensitising both
rebels and state forces to human rights, explaining the provisions of
international instruments, such as the Geneva Conventions and the Guiding
Principles on Internal Displacement.
Bisimwa Ruhana-Mirinde, IRC's
medical coordinator in Kaga-Bandoro, believes these efforts have paid off.
"Travellers along the road are no longer forced to make payments at barriers.
Fewer people are now being beaten up in their villages. Food distributed by aid
agencies is not looted any more," he told IRIN.
IRC also took over the regional
hospital in Kaga-Bandoro in late 2006, at a time of frequent clashes between
rebels and government forces, who controlled territory to the north and south of
the town respectively.
"It was a kind of phantom hospital,
with no medicines, just one doctor and only five or six consultations a day. Now
we see about 150 patients a day and have a working operating theatre," Boris
Varnitzky, IRC country director in CAR, told IRIN.
The primary healthcare system in the
area is also being revamped with help from Merlin, a British NGO. Thanks to this
programme, 11 dilapidated and looted health facilities are being rehabilitated
and, like Kabo hospital, care and medicines are free.
However, CAR's near-bankrupt economy means there is a long way to go before healthcare provision returns to "normal", as Arsen Mossio, the head of one health centre near Kaga-Bandoro, explained. "I'm owed 27 months of salary," he said.