Why I risked my life to expose a government massacre Anjan Sundaram

What does it mean to be a witness?

Why is it important to bear witness

to people’s suffering,

especially when those people
are isolated from us?

And what happens when we turn away?

Three years ago, I traveled
to the Central African Republic

to report on its ongoing war.

I’d heard warnings of massacres

in the country’s jungles and deserts,

but no one could locate these massacres

or tell me who was killed, or when.

I drove into this war

with little information.

I witnessed scenes
that were tragic and unreal,

and only at the end did I realize

that I had witnessed
the slow preparation of ethnic cleansing.

The Central African Republic
is a country of about five million people

the size of Texas

in the center of Africa.

The country has known chronic violence
since French colonial rule ended in 1960.

The war I reported on

was between the minority
Muslim government,

called the Seleka,

and citizen militias,

mostly Christian,

called the anti-balaka.

The first sign of the impending cleansing

was the breakdown of trust
within communities.

Three days after I arrived in the country,

I watched the small city
of Gaga be abandoned.

A battle was about to break out.

And to save themselves,

many people were working
as government spies,

identifying friends and neighbors

to be killed.

Cities and towns,

any place with humans, had become unsafe.

So people moved to the jungle.

I felt strangely isolated

as pigs and livestock
moved into the empty homes.

In a war zone,

you know that you are near the killing
when people have left.

The war moved across the jungle
and reached Gaga,

and I was surrounded
by the thunder of bombs.

Government forces drove into the jungle
to attack a town sheltering a militia.

I rode on motorcycle for hours,

crossing jungle streams
and tall elephant grass,

but I only got to the town

after the government had burned it

and its people were gone.

To see if I could speak to someone,

I shouted out that I was a friend,
that I would not hurt them.

A woman in a red shirt
ran out of the forest.

Others cautiously emerged from the trees

and asked, “Est-ce les gens savent?”

“Do people know?”

The question surprised me.

Their children were hungry and sick,

but they didn’t ask for food or medicine.

They asked me,

“Do people know what is happening to us?”

I felt helpless
as I wrote down their question.

And I became determined

that this moment in their lives

should not be forgotten.

In bearing witness to their crisis,

I felt a small communion
with these people.

From far away, this war had felt
like a footnote in world news.

As a witness,

the war felt like history unfolding.

The government denied
that it was committing any violence,

but I continually drove through towns

where people described
government massacres

from a day or a week before.

I felt overwhelmed

and tried to calm myself.

As I reported on these massacres,

I bought and ate

little sweets,

seeking the familiar
comfort of their taste.

Central Africans ate these sweets

to ease their hunger,

leaving a trail of thousands
of plastic wrappers as they fled.

On the few radio stations
still operating in the country,

I mostly heard pop music.

As the war mounted,

we received less information
about the massacres.

It became easier
to feel a sense of normalcy.

I witnessed the effect
of this missing information.

Two weeks later, I slowly and anxiously

drove into an isolated
militia headquarters,

a town called PK100.

Here, Christian fighters told me

that all Muslims were foreigners,

evil and allied with the government.

They likened Muslims to animals.

Without neutral observers or media

to counter this absurd narrative,

it became the single narrative
in these camps.

The militias began to hunt down Muslims,

and emptied the capital, Bangui,

of nearly 140,000 Muslims

in just a few months.

Most of the killing and fleeing of Muslims
went unrecorded by witnesses.

I’m telling you about my reporting
in the Central African Republic,

but I still ask myself why I went there.

Why put myself at risk?

I do this work

because I feel that ignored people
in all our communities

tell us something important

about who we are.

When information is missing,

people have the power
to manipulate reality.

Without witnesses,

we would believe that those thousands
of massacred people are still alive,

that those hundreds
of burned homes are still standing.

A war zone can pass

for a mostly peaceful place

when no one is watching.

And a witness can become precious,

and their gaze most necessary,

when violence passes silently,

unseen and unheard.

Thank you.

(Applause)