Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Violence erupts in Bangui despite departure of ex-rebel leader

-

Deadly violence including reports of cannibalism and widespread looting erupted in the capital of the Central African Republic after the resignation of its ex-rebel president, as an airlift of foreigners stranded in the strife-torn country began on Saturday.

Sporadic gunfire was heard overnight in Bangui with the shooting leaving at least five people dead, according to the latest toll reported by the Central African Red Cross.

There has also been looting throughout the city with crowds breaking down the doors of shops, many of them belonging to Muslims, reflecting the sectarian nature of the strife that has wracked the country, AFP correspondents reported.

"Those who were looted when the (mainly Muslim) Seleka (rebels) arrived (in March last year) are now looting in turn," said the head of the local Red Cross, pastor Antoine Mbaobogo.

A map of the Central African Republic's capital Bangui showing the position of government and r...
A map of the Central African Republic's capital Bangui showing the position of government and rebel forces
, AFP

Some of the thieves allegedly committed acts of cannibalism, witnesses told AFP.

One resident of the capital, still in shock, related an incident on Tuesday when a Muslim man was attacked by a group who cut him up with a machete.

"One of the individuals took hold of an arm and went and bought some bread and starting chewing on the flesh, along with his bread," said 35-year-old Jean-Sylvestre Tchya.

"The scene made many people vomit, and some cried out in horror," he said.

Another witness, Alain Gbabobou, said he saw a man pick up the head and wrap it up carefully, saying he would "feast on it" later.

Meanwhile, the International Organisation for Migration on Saturday began an airlift of thousands of foreigners out of the strife-torn country following appeals from neighbouring countries. The first flight evacuated some 800 Chadians.

Central African Republic president Michel Djotodia arrives at Mpoko Bangui airport in the capital Ba...
Central African Republic president Michel Djotodia arrives at Mpoko Bangui airport in the capital Bangui on January 8, 2014
Eric Feferberg, AFP/File

More than 60,000 people from other African nations have asked for help at their embassies in the CAR, including Chad, Niger, Mali, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, an IOM statement said.

On Saturday morning in Bangui a student who gave his name as Berson told AFP that looting had been going on since Friday, when Michel Djotodia stepped down as president under intense diplomatic pressure.

"It's the shops of Muslims that have been looted in this neighbourhood," Berson said. "There are a lot of Seleka (ex-rebels) in this area. They have to disarm them quickly. If not it's carnage," he added.

Djotodia, the first Muslim leader in the majority-Christian nation, had come under fire for failing to rein in the rebels who brought him to power in March 2013 and whose abuses triggered retaliatory violence by Christian militias.

Anti-Seleka demonstrators pose with placards reading 'Michel must leave'  'Djotodia m...
Anti-Seleka demonstrators pose with placards reading 'Michel must leave', 'Djotodia must leave, we want peace' as they march to Mpoko airport in Bangui, on January 10, 2014
Eric Feferberg, AFP

A special regional summit in Chad called to try to restore peace in the CAR raised hopes that the resignation of Djotodia along with that of Prime Minister Nicolas Tiangaye would ease the tensions in the country.

But signs of sectarian conflict remained in Bangui, where a mosque was the target of a group of young men who looted and dismantled the building, taking away bricks and roofing.

"It's impossible to live with the Muslims. We don't want Arabs in Central Africa," one of the looters told AFP.

Ten months of violence have displaced a fifth of the country's population, and the sectarian flare-up has killed more than 1,000 people in the past month alone, despite former colonial power France's military intervention and the presence of an African peacekeeping force.

President of the Central African transitional parliament Alexandre-Ferdinand Nguendet  acting as int...
President of the Central African transitional parliament Alexandre-Ferdinand Nguendet, acting as interim president, pictured in Bangui on January 10, 2014
Badji Baba, AFP

Djotodia successor talks Monday

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has called on the African Union to speedily provide promised troops to help curb the "terrible crisis" in the impoverished country.

France has deployed 1,600 troops in the country to support the African Union MISCA force, which is meant to have up to 6,000 troops but has not yet reached 3,500.

European nations on Friday agreed in principle on a plan to launch a joint military operation in the Central African Republic, with a final decision expected on January 20, an EU source said.

Candidates to replace Djotodia have yet to emerge, but the interim parliament, whose members returned from a regional crisis summit in Chad on Saturday, is due to hold a special session on Monday.

The head of the transitional body, Alexandre-Ferdinand Nguendet, will be temporary head of state for a maximum of 15 days.

With much of the landlocked country's population in need of food aid, a major humanitarian crisis is unfolding in Bangui's overcrowded camps and in the vast hinterland.

The United Nations has warned that both ex-Seleka rebels and CAR former soldiers have crossed into the volatile Democratic Republic of Congo, causing local residents to flee.

France warned before sending troops last month that the Central African Republic -- which has been plagued by coups and civil unrest since independence in 1960 -- risked becoming a Somalia-style "failed state".

Deadly violence including reports of cannibalism and widespread looting erupted in the capital of the Central African Republic after the resignation of its ex-rebel president, as an airlift of foreigners stranded in the strife-torn country began on Saturday.

Sporadic gunfire was heard overnight in Bangui with the shooting leaving at least five people dead, according to the latest toll reported by the Central African Red Cross.

There has also been looting throughout the city with crowds breaking down the doors of shops, many of them belonging to Muslims, reflecting the sectarian nature of the strife that has wracked the country, AFP correspondents reported.

“Those who were looted when the (mainly Muslim) Seleka (rebels) arrived (in March last year) are now looting in turn,” said the head of the local Red Cross, pastor Antoine Mbaobogo.

A map of the Central African Republic's capital Bangui showing the position of government and r...

A map of the Central African Republic's capital Bangui showing the position of government and rebel forces
, AFP

Some of the thieves allegedly committed acts of cannibalism, witnesses told AFP.

One resident of the capital, still in shock, related an incident on Tuesday when a Muslim man was attacked by a group who cut him up with a machete.

“One of the individuals took hold of an arm and went and bought some bread and starting chewing on the flesh, along with his bread,” said 35-year-old Jean-Sylvestre Tchya.

“The scene made many people vomit, and some cried out in horror,” he said.

Another witness, Alain Gbabobou, said he saw a man pick up the head and wrap it up carefully, saying he would “feast on it” later.

Meanwhile, the International Organisation for Migration on Saturday began an airlift of thousands of foreigners out of the strife-torn country following appeals from neighbouring countries. The first flight evacuated some 800 Chadians.

Central African Republic president Michel Djotodia arrives at Mpoko Bangui airport in the capital Ba...

Central African Republic president Michel Djotodia arrives at Mpoko Bangui airport in the capital Bangui on January 8, 2014
Eric Feferberg, AFP/File

More than 60,000 people from other African nations have asked for help at their embassies in the CAR, including Chad, Niger, Mali, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, an IOM statement said.

On Saturday morning in Bangui a student who gave his name as Berson told AFP that looting had been going on since Friday, when Michel Djotodia stepped down as president under intense diplomatic pressure.

“It’s the shops of Muslims that have been looted in this neighbourhood,” Berson said. “There are a lot of Seleka (ex-rebels) in this area. They have to disarm them quickly. If not it’s carnage,” he added.

Djotodia, the first Muslim leader in the majority-Christian nation, had come under fire for failing to rein in the rebels who brought him to power in March 2013 and whose abuses triggered retaliatory violence by Christian militias.

Anti-Seleka demonstrators pose with placards reading 'Michel must leave'  'Djotodia m...

Anti-Seleka demonstrators pose with placards reading 'Michel must leave', 'Djotodia must leave, we want peace' as they march to Mpoko airport in Bangui, on January 10, 2014
Eric Feferberg, AFP

A special regional summit in Chad called to try to restore peace in the CAR raised hopes that the resignation of Djotodia along with that of Prime Minister Nicolas Tiangaye would ease the tensions in the country.

But signs of sectarian conflict remained in Bangui, where a mosque was the target of a group of young men who looted and dismantled the building, taking away bricks and roofing.

“It’s impossible to live with the Muslims. We don’t want Arabs in Central Africa,” one of the looters told AFP.

Ten months of violence have displaced a fifth of the country’s population, and the sectarian flare-up has killed more than 1,000 people in the past month alone, despite former colonial power France’s military intervention and the presence of an African peacekeeping force.

President of the Central African transitional parliament Alexandre-Ferdinand Nguendet  acting as int...

President of the Central African transitional parliament Alexandre-Ferdinand Nguendet, acting as interim president, pictured in Bangui on January 10, 2014
Badji Baba, AFP

Djotodia successor talks Monday

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has called on the African Union to speedily provide promised troops to help curb the “terrible crisis” in the impoverished country.

France has deployed 1,600 troops in the country to support the African Union MISCA force, which is meant to have up to 6,000 troops but has not yet reached 3,500.

European nations on Friday agreed in principle on a plan to launch a joint military operation in the Central African Republic, with a final decision expected on January 20, an EU source said.

Candidates to replace Djotodia have yet to emerge, but the interim parliament, whose members returned from a regional crisis summit in Chad on Saturday, is due to hold a special session on Monday.

The head of the transitional body, Alexandre-Ferdinand Nguendet, will be temporary head of state for a maximum of 15 days.

With much of the landlocked country’s population in need of food aid, a major humanitarian crisis is unfolding in Bangui’s overcrowded camps and in the vast hinterland.

The United Nations has warned that both ex-Seleka rebels and CAR former soldiers have crossed into the volatile Democratic Republic of Congo, causing local residents to flee.

France warned before sending troops last month that the Central African Republic — which has been plagued by coups and civil unrest since independence in 1960 — risked becoming a Somalia-style “failed state”.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

The unanswered questions about the future of work have now achieved a level of stagnation normally seen in mausoleums.

Tech & Science

Through Artemis, NASA will address high priority science questions, focusing on those that are best accomplished by human explorers.

Business

The EU as a whole has an annual trade surplus with the United States of $235.6 billion.

Entertainment

Drummer Cyrus Bolooki of New Found Glory spoke about their forthcoming concert at Jones Beach on Long Island, where they will be performing with...