19/12/2013 10:46
CAR death toll much higher than thought, says Amnesty
Former rebels in the Central African Republic killed almost 1,000 people in a two-day rampage this month, double an earlier UN estimate, Amnesty International has said, according to the BBC.
The group says war crimes are being committed in CAR.
In a separate report, Human Rights Watch is calling on the UN to send a peacekeeping mission to CAR.
The mostly Muslim fighters ousted President Francois Bozize in March, sparking sectarian conflict.
Rebel leader Michel Djotodia became the Christian majority country's first Muslim leader and is now interim president.
In its report, Amnesty said former Seleka rebels killed nearly 1,000 people in the capital, Bangui, in revenge for deadly Christian militia attacks.
The death toll was much higher than earlier UN estimates, which spoke of 450 killed in Bangui and another 150 elsewhere in the country.
The attacks came after Christian militias known as "anti-balaka" (anti-machete) went door-to-door in some parts of Bangui "and killed approximately 60 Muslim men", Amnesty said.
"The de-facto government forces, known as ex-Seleka, retaliated on a larger scale against Christians in the wake of the attack, killing nearly 1,000 men over a two-day period and systematically looting civilian homes. A small number of women and children were also killed," the report said.
Amnesty says civilians are being killed on a daily basis in Bangui, despite the presence of French and African Union troops.