Clashes in Central African Republic force thousands to seek refuge at UN peacekeeping base
New York, Aug 27 (IBNS): Clashes between rival militias in the past few days have forced several thousand people to flee their homes in the Central African Republic (CAR) town of Bambari and seek shelter at a former cotton factory inside the compound of the United Nations peacekeeping mission, the UN refugee agency said today.
	“We are extremely concerned by the mounting violence in Bambari and its impact on the civilian population. Our staff have reported the displacement of people who are extremely frightened,” Kouassi Lazare Etien, the Representative of the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in CAR, said in a press release.
	
	Mr. Etien said that the agency was also worried about hundreds of Sudanese refugees “trapped in a refugee camp [near Bambari] and at high risk of attacks.” The road leading to the camp had been inaccessible since the weekend, but a UNHCR team escorted by UN peacekeepers reached the Sudanese refugee camp on Wednesday.
	
	“Fresh fighting between rival militia forces erupted on August 20 and triggered new waves of displacement,” the refugee agency reported.
	
	“A spontaneous IDP [internally displaced persons] site had sprung up inside the Bambari compound of the UN peace-keeping force,” the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in CAR (MINUSCA), according to the refugee agency.
	
	UNHCR staff said the agency’s partner, the National Refugee Commission, had registered about 3,000 displaced persons in the MINUSCA compound as of Tuesday.
	
	“But conditions are dire at the site, a former cotton factory with no sanitation facilities and limited access to water and shelter,” the agency said.
	
	The situation began to ease on Thursday but UNHCR staff say Bambari remains very tense and they fear the situation could deteriorate again.
	
	UNHCR is now able to move around Bambari and is trying to assess the total number of newly displaced. The tension remains with armed groups in control of the streets.
	
	The population and aid workers were isolated and inaccessible, but a humanitarian corridor has been opened to the airport since Tuesday following negotiations between MINUSCA and the rival militia groups.
	
	The latest flare-up in Bambari erupted after a 19-year-old Muslim was killed in the city and beheaded by alleged anti-Balaka fighters, according to the refugee agency. “This triggered violent reprisal attacks between the two communities in Bambari, which have left at least 10 people dead and many injured, including ICRC (International Committee of the Red Cross) staff,” it said.
	
	
	UN Photo/Catianne Tijerina
Top Headlines
- 
          
News
CSR in the Crossfire: Professor and practitioners debate over ethics in India Inc. at Kolkata's MCHD talk
October 24, 2025
 - 
          
News
Jashanpreet Singh Case: California under fire for licensing undocumented truck driver
October 24, 2025
 - 
          
News
India upgrades Technical Mission in Kabul to Embassy, days after Muttaqi's visit to New Delhi
October 22, 2025
 - 
          
News
Pakistan, Afghanistan agree to 48-hour ceasefire after deadly border clashes
October 15, 2025
 - 
          
News
Afghan Taliban, Pakistan exchange gunfire, dozens killed
October 15, 2025
 - 
          
News
Trump hails Netanyahu in Israel after hostage release, declares historic dawn of a new Middle East
October 13, 2025
 - 
          
News
Historic dawn of a new Middle East: Donald Trump addresses Israeli Parliament
October 13, 2025
 - 
          
News
Shah Rukh Khan receives maiden National Award from President Droupadi Murmu
September 23, 2025
 - 
          
News
Kolkata: Ahiritola Yubak Brinda invites Auram to make jewellery for Ma Durga and her family
September 20, 2025
 - 
          
News
Israel-US alliance 'never been stronger', Netanyahu says as State Secretary Rubio visit for talks
September 15, 2025
 
      



