Tuesday 29 April 2014

International Community Takes Interest in Plight of Central African Muslims once Christians Retaliate.

"You are the best of the nations raised up for men; you enjoin what is right & forbid the wrong & believe in Allah; & if the followers of the Book had believed it would have been better for them; of them (some) are believers & most of them are transgressors." So Allah assures his deluded followers in his unimpeachable book, the Koran, in verse 3:110. If your holy book told you that you were some kind of master race, & also that: "Surely the vilest of animals in Allah's sight are those who disbelieve, then they would not believe." As Koran 8:55 goes on to say, you'd be a bit confident, would you not?

Overconfident, some might say. And that must be at least partly the reason that the Muslims of the Central African Republic, who comprised a mere 15% of the entire population, felt that they could take over that country & start butchering their Christian neighbours.

"But the majority of Muslims are peaceful." Say the liberal elite, but what help was this peaceful majority in curbing the excesses of the jihadis in the CAR? Or in Egypt, for that matter? Or Pakistan? What help will they be when the Muslim uprising begins in Western Europe?

The jihad upon the non-Muslims of the CAR was only stopped by Christians fighting back & driving out the Muslims. Now that this has happened, the international community, too chary of offending Muslim sensibilities when Muslims were killing Christians, are presently bending over backwards to assist the poor, poor Muslims now that they are getting their comeuppance. And no one is keener to portray the Muslims as victims than the BBC was on Sunday (hat-tip to QueeniesSoapbox @QueenLareefer1):

CAR crisis: Peacekeepers escort Muslims out of Bangui

Peacekeepers have escorted more than 1,200 Muslims out of the capital of the Central African Republic, Bangui.

They were some of the last remaining Muslims in the city, who have been targeted by mainly Christian militias in the country's civil conflict.

The country has been hit by civil conflict since Seleka rebels ousted the president in March 2013.

The largely Muslim Seleka rebels were accused of targeting Christians, prompting worsening sectarian violence.

There are also reports that at least 22 people, including 15 local chiefs and three local workers for the medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), were killed in an attack in the town of Nanga Boguila.

The killings happened on Saturday with most of the victims dying when an MSF-run clinic was attacked, Gilles Xavier Nguembassa, a former MP for the area, told Reuters.

Mr Nguembassa said Seleka rebels were responsible for the attack.

'Ethnic cleansing'

The convoy carrying Muslims from Bangui's PK-12 district headed to the relative safety of two towns in the north of the country.

Shortly after the convoy left, looters descended on the district to strip houses and businesses, and even the mosque.

"We didn't want the Muslims here and we don't want their mosque here any more either,'' looter Guy Richard told AP.

Some Muslims do remain in Bangui but thousands have fled Christian-majority areas in recent weeks, heightening fears of a de facto partition of the country.

CAR's religious make-up
  • Christians - 50%
  • Muslims - 15%
  • Indigenous beliefs - 35%

Source: Index Mundi

"I leave with a heavy heart but we have been chased from here," PK-12 resident Tonga Djobo told AP.

Amnesty International has accused peacekeepers of failing to prevent ethnic cleansing.

Aid agencies have warned the expulsions could exacerbate a food crisis, as many of the shops and wholesalers were run by Muslims.

Around a quarter of the country's 4.6 million people have fled their homes due to the conflict.

Bozize
Djotodia
After the mainly Muslim rebel Seleka group deposed President Francois Bozize and installed their leader Michel Djotodia as president, it was accused of targeting Christians.

In January, Mr Djotodia was in turn forced to step down amid criticism he had not done enough to stem sectarian violence.

Since then, Muslims have been singled out for attack, with thousands fleeing their homes, many to neighbouring countries such as Cameroon and Chad.

Some 6,000 African Union and 2,000 French troops in CAR have failed to halt the bloodshed and the UN Security Council has approved plans to deploy a force of around 12,000 later this year.

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