UNITED NATIONS (AP) Violent attacks by mostly Muslim and Christian militias on each other's communities in Central African Republic are spiraling out of control, setting the stage for "large-scale massacres and counter-massacres," said Human Rights Watch's U.N. director.
Philippe Bolopion, who has just returned from Central African Republic, said no one seems to be pursuing any real political or religious agenda the warring parties are just looting, raping, killing and razing villages.
Now villagers have formed vigilante committees called the anti-balaka, meaning "anti-machete," to defend themselves -- but too often to retaliate against Muslim civilians, Bolopion said, leading to the prospect of "large-scale massacres."
"We have entered a cycle of massacres and counter-massacres by two armed forces who almost never face each other, but who kill civilians from communities they associate with their enemies," he told The Associated Press on Friday.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, in a report released Friday, urged the Security Council "to explore the option of a possible United Nations peacekeeping mission in that country," in additional to an African Union force already in the country.