Why should religion have anything to do with this?
Central African Republic crisis: 'Like Darfur, plus anarchy'
BANGUI, Central African Republic At Bangui International Airport, nearly 100,000 people are living in a makeshift camp after fleeing the unspeakable violence that has seized this nation. They are hungry and living chock-a-block in hangars and under the wings of old airplanes. They believe the presence of French troops nearby will keep them safe. No one appears to be in charge.
Elsewhere in the city, an old monastery has been turned into refugee center filled with children who have endured horrors, like 8-year-old Ngaiso Chekina, who lost her mother, father brother, sister and grandparents to the sectarian brutality.
I am the only survivor, she told NBC News.
Ngaiso is watched over by the only relative she has left, a great-aunt. In a program run by Save the Children, she drew a picture of her old life, with fish in a river behind her home and flowers near the front door.
At night, she dreams of her lost family and wakes up crying. She says she has no words for the men who killed her parents, only a prayer.
Bless me and keep me safe, she said.
At the airport, the United Nations World Food Programme was finally able to pass out food for the first time in four weeks. At times the desperation spilled out of control, with people yelling and shoving for a place in line.
"Before life was not like this. We are living like animals. We kill each other because there is no justice," Archbishop of the Central African Republic, Dieudonn Nzapalainga told NBC News, adding, "I ask God to purify us so he can introduce us again to love each other."
The violence here has included documented cases of crimes against humanity and war crimes, according to Amnesty International. Both United States and United Nations officials have feared a slide into genocide.
On the streets, that fear is rising with reports that the interim president of the Central African Republic could soon step down. The reports from numerous news agencies, including Reuters, cite diplomatic and political sources as saying the resignation of President Michel Djotodia is "imminent" and could come as early as Thursday. If that is true, the concern is, revenge killings could come next.
Djotodia is reportedly out of the country, heading to Chad where a summit of regional leaders is being held.
It was Djotodia's accendancy to the presidency that lit the match for the rage of violence, when in this majority Christian nation, mostly Muslim rebels seized control of the government last March, and installed him as the country's first Muslim president. The rebels then began targeting Christians. After months of killings, raping and pillaging, Christians formed vigilante groups in response.
But there is more to what is fueling the horrific intensity of the rampages. These two groups include separate ethnic tribes who've long struggled over resources, though before the coup they were able to live together and even inter-marry.
Now both sides are accused of systematically targeting the other, going house to house to pull people out of their beds, killing mostly men but also women. Even children have suffered the ugliest kinds of violence.
The violence includes torture, lynchings, beheadings, rape, drownings, people being set on fire, many ending up in mass graves. It is happening throughout the country, but most of the violence is here in Bangui.
Dependable numbers of just how many people have been killed are hard to find. About 1,000 people are thought to have been killed since December, but the true number is believed to be far higher. Fear of the violence has 935,000 people, or more than 20 percent of the country's population, on the run for safety, and more than half are children.
As Amy Martin, head of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in CAR, told NBC News, "This is like Darfur, plus anarchy."
When are people going to finally get it? I am truly confused about what attracts people to religion. People here, who have no idea what it means to really suffer, will pray for God to help them get over a cold, or to get a call back from applying for a job, or for God to take poor old sick grandma peacefully in her sleep to end her suffering, etc. etc. - as if a God who would let an African Christian family be slaughtered right in front oftheir eight year daughter would somehow help with issues so incomprehensibly unimportant in comparison.
This is a story that should be about fierce, horrific sectarian violence, and yet the words "Muslim" and "Christian" predictably appear in it. Why do these people want anything to do with religion in the first place?
Anytime Religion is used to govern over a country death squads are not far behind. It happened centuries ago and it happens still today. Religion was designed to control andcomfort humanity not to govern maim and kill. Christians and Muslims wonder why the young withdraw from their religion. Educated individuals see the Christian and Muslimleaders use abuse and harm and kill others andtheir own in the name of their deity.
They cling out of desperation. Fighting back against an army is an act of futility. Praying is a means to ignore and accept the inevitable. The old I go to a better place faith. One sad way to die.
Sectarian normally stands for religion the mentioning of Christian Country and Muslim Rebels all part of the article you posted????
It was Djotodia's accendancy to the presidency that lit the match for the rage of violence, when in this majority Christian nation, mostly Muslim rebels seized control of the government last March, and installed him as the country's first Muslim president. The rebels then began targeting Christians. After months of killings, raping and pillaging, Christians formed vigilante groups in response.
I really don't think you get "it" . The issue isn't religion in general . It is the extreme danger of the Islamic religion .Here is a quote from your own seeded article :
The only intelligent response to this terrorism is to form a counter to these actions . Can you expect atheists to take on such a dangerous task ? Of course not . Only a strong belief system such as an opposing religion could serve as a focal point for such resistance .