19-01-2014 News Release 14 / 11
Geneva / Bangui (ICRC) – Fresh intercommunal violence has flared in western and north-western parts of the Central
African Republic. Since Friday, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Central African Red Cross
Society have been administering first aid and have taken 25 seriously injured people to hospital in the capital, Bangui.
Much of the population, in danger of reprisals and with no-one to protect them, have fled their homes and are hiding in
the bush. The ICRC is extremely concerned about their welfare. “The ICRC calls on the authorities and on the
international armed forces present in the country to take immediate action to end the intercommunal violence,” said
Georgios Georgantas, head of the organization’s delegation in the Central African Republic. “We also call on all those
who have armed themselves to respect human life and dignity and to facilitate both Red Cross access to the victims and
its activities to assist them.”
In the past 48 hours, Red Cross staff and volunteers have buried some 50 bodies discovered in the area around
Bossembélé, Boyali and Boali, in the north-west of the country.
“Our priorities are first aid for the injured at the scene of the violence, handling the dead with dignity, and boosting
the ability of our colleagues from the Central African Red Cross to take action,” explained Bonaventure Bawirutwabo, the
ICRC’s medical coordinator in the country. An ICRC surgical team arrived on 3 January and has been hard at work ever
since at Bangui’s Community Hospital, where the most serious cases are taken. The organization is also furnishing the
hospital with medicines and other supplies and training local surgical staff in the specialized procedures needed to
treat gunshot wounds and other weapon-caused injuries.
ENDS