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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
World

Rebels kill six in latest attack in Central African Republic

An woman poses for a portrait in Paoua on 4 December 2021. She fled her home after an incursion of an armed group in her village and found refuge in Paoua with more than 100 displaced people. © Barbara Debout/AFP

Five civilians and a soldier were killed in the latest attack by armed groups in the Central African Republic, a local official said Monday.

Rebel fighters attacked positions of Central African forces on Sunday in the town of Mann, some 600 kilometres northwest of the capital, Bangui, local sub-prefect Jean-Ulrich Sembetanga told AFP.

"The toll is five civilians killed, one Central African soldier and one rebel," Sembetanga said, blaming the powerful 3R (Return, Reclamation, Rehabilitation) group, which is active in the northwest of the country and mainly made up of the Fulani ethnic group.

The news came hours after a report that 15 civilians had been killed in the central east of the former French colony on 6 and 7 December.

Cases of amputation

The United Nation's MINUSCA mission in CAR said Monday that others had been mutilated in that attack some 400 kilometres east of Bangui, and that some 1,500 people had been forced from their homes.

The organisation added it had evidence of "cases of amputation, extortion and destruction of homes and the displacement of upwards of 1,500 people", pointing the finger of blame at a mainly Christian and animist militia known as the anti-Balaka.

MINUSCA added it "strongly condemns the recent violence deliberately targeting civilian populations".

One of the poorest countries in the world, CAR descended into conflict in 2013 when then president Francois Bozize was ousted by a rebel coalition, called the Seleka, drawn largely from the Muslim minority.

The coup triggered a sectarian bloodbath between the Seleka and anti-Balaka forces.

In December last year, rebels launched a new offensive against current President Faustin-Archange Touadera's government on the eve of presidential elections.

Touadera won re-election, and his army has now reconquered the lost territory -- the UN and France say with key support from Russia's Wagner private security group -- as well as crack Rwandan troops.

Moscow denies the allegations.

Touadera on 15 October decreed a unilateral ceasefire with a view to opening a dialogue with armed groups. The main groups responded by announcing they would abide by the truce.

But on 28 November, some 30 civilians and two soldiers were killed in an attack in the northwest which authorities blamed on the 3R group.

(With AFP)

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