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Children run for cover as gunshots erupt during an operation in the Boy Rabe neighbourhood of Bangui.
AFP/Reuters/Bangui
French and African peacekeepers have seized weapons from militia in the capital of the strife-torn Central African Republic (CAR), but failed to detain a wanted leader of the rogue groups.
The international troops went house to house for about four hours in Bangui’s Boy Rabe neighbourhood, the base of mostly Christian militias whose attacks have driven many minority Muslims from the city in recent weeks, sparking warnings of “ethnic cleansing”.
Automatic weapons, grenades and a large number of munitions were seized in the operation that involved some 250 peacekeepers and police, according to an AFP correspondent on the scene.
“All people who were found to have weapons in their homes have been identified and will be handed over to the police,” a peacekeeper from the African Union MISCA mission told AFP.
But despite surrounding the house of a senior militia leader Patrice Edouard Ngaissona, the soldiers failed to capture the man who casts himself as the political co-ordinator of the fearsome “anti-balaka” militias.
“They didn’t manage to take me, I was out,” Ngaissona said later.
Bangui chief prosecutor Ghislain Grezenguet said Ngaissona was “the big fish who had to be detained”.
Peacekeepers left the neighbourhood after about four hours to jeers from residents.
The so-called “anti-balaka” militias were formed in the country in response to killing and pillaging by the mainly Muslim Seleka rebels following their coup nearly a year ago in the majority Christian nation.
In recent months, as international peacekeepers deployed to the former French colony have disarmed the Seleka, brutal attacks by the militias have sowed terror among the Muslim population, forcing many to flee the country.
Amnesty International this week warned that violence in Central Africa has grown into an “ethnic cleansing” campaign, while the UN refugee agency has described the situation as “a humanitarian catastrophe of unspeakable proportions”.
Meanwhile, French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian has said that France’s military operation in the CAR will last longer than initially planned because the situation in the country is worse than anticipated.
“I think it will be longer than expected because the level of hatred and violence is more important than we had imagined,” Le Drian told France Inter radio. “A military operation is not decreed as clockwork, we have to adapt.”
France said on Friday that it would send another 400 troops to help combat the crisis in the African country.
There are no comments.
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