Days before Sunday’s election, armed clashes in the Central African Republic (CAR) have prompted the “serious concern”
of the UN aid coordinator in the country.
An escalation of tensions, uptick of violence in several parts of the country, insecurity and fear has led over 55,000
people to flee their homes, which further increases their vulnerability.
“I strongly condemn these acts of violence which serve to increase the suffering and the trauma of the people of the
Central African Republic”, said UN Humanitarian Coordinator Denise Brown.Humanitarians in crosshairs
The UN official also pointed out that armed combatants have increased their threats and attacks against CAR’s dedicated
humanitarian actors, preventing hundreds of thousand people in the west and center of the country from receiving urgent
assistance, particularly surrounding health.
In the past week alone, over 17 incidents against humanitarian personnel and assets have been recorded, with an
ambulance and a health district vehicle carjacked, injuring a worker.
“I call on armed elements to immediately stop all attacks against humanitarian personnel and to abide by their
obligations under international humanitarian law and to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure”, the Humanitarian
Coordinator asserted.Delivering aid
Despite prevailing insecurity and access challenges, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs(OCHA)said that humanitarian partners continue to deliver critical lifesaving assistance across the country, deploying
emergency medical teams and airlifting indispensable health and nutritional supplies.
“Humanitarian actors continue to remain in the communities alongside the population, despite the violence, which must
stop,” said the UN Humanitarian Coordinator.
Against the backdrop that 2.8 million people need assistance and protection, Ms. Brown also appealed to donors to scale
up vital funding for CAR’s humanitarian response, including for the UN Humanitarian Air Services (UNHAS).
Managed by the World Food Programme (WFP), UNHAS offers safe, reliable and cost-efficient transportfor the wider humanitarian communityto and from areas of
crisis and intervention. It is theonly humanitarian air service that gives equal access to all aid entities.
The 2021 Humanitarian Response plan requires $444.7 million to assist 1.8 million people.