UN peacekeepers were sent on Monday to protect a camp of refugees from Sudan's Darfur region in the northeast of the Central African Republic (CAR) and humanitarian staff working there, UN officials said here.
The United Nations took the step after an attack, apparently by bandits, left three people
dead on a nearby road in the region.
"This attack apparently due to people seeking to block the road (between Sam Ouandja
and Ouanda-Djale), has provoked serious tension between the UFDR, an armed Central African group, two of whose members were killed, and the Sudanese refugees of Sam Ouandja," the UN mission set up to protect civilians and facilitate
humanitarian aid in Chad and CAR (MINURCAT) said in a communique.
The mission, known by the acronym MINURCAT, added that it was following the situation closely and would reinforce its military presence in Sam Ouandja if necessary.
CAR, especially its northeast, has been plagued by armed rebels and bandits for years, a
situation exacerbated by the spill-over of the Darfur conflict. UN officials have repeatedly
called for an end to attacks on civilians that have seen scores of thousands of people driven
into the bush, with scant means of sustenance, an appeal reiterated on Monday by the mission.
"MINURCAT stresses that refugee camps must maintain their civilian character and that
all attacks perpetrated against refugees or humanitarian workers constitute a violation of
international human rights that can entail penal consequences," the communique said.