‘A Question of Humanity’: Witness to the Turning Point In Central African Republic

4 minute read

Almost six months after thousands of foreign peacekeepers waded into Central African Republic in a bid to control the fallout from street fighting that left hundreds dead in the capital of Bangui, they remain unable to stem the killing and population shift that has begun to redefine its makeup.

Their arrival under a United Nations mandate forced a retreat by the disbanded militants of Séléka, the mainly Muslim rebel coalition that seized control earlier that year and began a campaign of looting and killing largely against non-Muslims. But that power void, exacerbated by a lax justice system, was quickly filled by anti-balaka. The groups of armed vigilantes, initially organized to combat local crime and whose ranks of Christians and animists includes ex-soldiers, have fought back against the militants and furiously targeted the Muslim minority, which they view as complicit in Séléka’s unpunished abuses.

Anti-balaka now stand accused of crimes worse than what prompted their retaliation as the burning of whole villages and gruesome mutilations, among other threats and attacks, have killed an untold number of people and pushed hundreds of thousands of others from their homes. Amid tales of ethnic cleansing in the west and as reports of crude attacks surface in the east, where Séléka remains in control and is regrouping, the country continues to slide into perhaps the bloodiest and most unstable crossroads of its independence.

Italian photojournalist Ugo Lucio Borga, of the Echo Photo Agency, witnessed this turning point first-hand when he arrived in January. He took advantage of a connection with an army sergeant-turned-commander of a Bangui-based anti-balaka militia, who he met years ago in the remote southeast while covering the hunt for Joseph Kony, the elusive leader of the Lord’s Resistance Army. With prime access to their day-to-day happenings, he could document the conflict as anti-balaka became more brazen and learn more about the fighters beyond the amulets they wear as “protection.”

“They are really young people without education, without culture, but they needed to do something to stop the violence from the Séléka,” he told TIME. With most schools out of operation and seemingly few families who hadn’t seen bloodshed, he could see why they so easily took up arms. “Now the problem is that they know what war really means and they have become another people. They are now fighters.”

Throughout his trip, during which he also shadowed French troops and peacekeepers from Rwanda and Burundi, Borga saw the effect on children—“after one year of violence, continued violence, they consider the situation normal”—and became more aware of the roots of the conflict. The fighting, after decades of corruption and meddling by external influencers, appeared to take on a more religious undertone and sparked concerns of a partition in a country where Christians and Muslims have historically lived in peace, despite instances of marginalization. But Borga found that not all anti-balaka wanted to outright rid the country of its Muslims. This specific militia told him they targeted foreigners because, among other reasons, Séléka included militants from Chad and Sudan.

Borga left in February having captured a series of raw, intense scenes that stand out for their intimacy. He plans to return ahead of the elections, scheduled for February 2015, but knows that making a big influence is a tall order when the conflict is so neglected on the international stage. Still, it’s the ability to inform that drives him, as well as an innate curiosity as to how it will end: “I think it’s a question of humanity, if it exists somewhere.”

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A group of anti-balaka militiamen sit for a portrait. Feb. 13, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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Members of a minister's family cry after he and a son were killed by militiamen, one day after the politician spoke out on the radio against the violence. Feb. 9, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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Many children often reach the emergency hospital alone to receive care as a result of disease or violence. Jan. 29, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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Anti-balaka militiamen. Feb. 8, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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An ex-Séléka fighter is immobilized by African Union troops in the Miskine district. Feb. 1, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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Women pray at the improvised graves of their children, killed by ex-Séléka fighters, at the refugee camp adjacent to Bangui M'Poko International Airport. Feb. 11, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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A child is treated at a medical center set up by Médecins Sans Frontières adjacent to M'Poko International Airport. At the time, dozens of people were being treated there for stray bullets or wounds from machetes. Feb. 2, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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An anti-balaka militiaman wears Islamic clothing looted from the houses of Muslims, a sign of victory. Feb. 6, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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A group of armed militants were captured by African Union troops in the Fifth Arrondissement, known as PK5. Feb. 7, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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Volunteers with the local Red Cross bury victims of street clashes in Bimbo. Jan. 30, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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Anti-balaka militiamen in the capital's Fourth District. Feb. 8, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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An ex-member of Séléka is immobilized by Burundian troops in the Fifth Arrondissement after he attempted to throw a hand grenade at their patrol. Feb. 1, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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A destroyed mosque near the capital, littered with graffiti written by anti-balaka militiamen. Feb. 11, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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Burundian troops fight against ex-members of Séléka who are hiding in homes of the capital's Miskine district. Feb. 1, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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Rwandan soldiers contain a crowd of children at a refugee camp during a visit by interim President Catherine Samba-Panza. Jan. 31, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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A stash of unused grenades at the headquarters of the French army, which has recovered more than 130 cubic meters of weapons—many of them from China, like these cheap hand grenades. Feb. 6, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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African Union troops patrol in the capital's Fifth Arrondissement, known as PK5. Feb. 1, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency
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A man stands outside his tent in the refugee camp adjacent to Bangui M'Poko International Airport, which held some 120,000 people at its peak. Feb. 7, 2014.Ugo Lucio Borga—Echo Photo Agency

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