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Peacekeepers fire on Bangui protesters

Published: 24 Dec 2013 - 08:44 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 05:32 pm

BANGUI: African peacekeepers fired into a crowd of protesters in the capital of the Central African Republic yesterday, killing one person and injuring around 40 more, in a shooting set to escalate tensions in the strife-torn country.
The Chadian soldiers, part of a UN-mandated force, opened fire on stone-throwing protesters outside Bangui airport who accused them of complicity with rebels who have been terrorising the population, according to reporters on the scene.
Several hundred Christian demonstrators had massed to call for the departure of President Michel Djotodia, a former rebel who became the first Muslim leader of the majority Christian nation after a March coup that unleashed the current wave of sectarian violence.
They were also demanding the departure of Chadian troops within the 3,700-strong African Union’s MISCA force that, alongside French forces, is battling to restore order in the CAR.
Demonstrators started throwing rocks at two 4X4 vehicles with AU troops from Chad, who responded by firing their weapons in the air and towards the crowd, shooting one person dead, according to reporters.
French troops quickly intervened to evacuate the victims.
Around 40 injured — three in a serious condition — were transferred to an emergency hospital facility set up by Medecins sans Frontieres at the airport, said the aid group’s on-site coordinator Lindis Hurum. “I came to see the demonstration and I got shot in the leg,” said one of the injured, who gave his name as Ludovic.
Many in mostly-Christian Bangui accuse Chad — whose President Idriss Deby Itno has long been kingmaker in the CAR — of masterminding the Seleka rebellion behind the March coup.
Djotodia has officially disbanded Seleka but some of its members went rogue, leading to months of killing, raping and pillaging—and prompting Christians to form vigilante groups in response.
Chadian and Sudanese mercenaries within Seleka are blamed for many of the worst crimes against the population.
“We ask for our rights and we get killed. There are too many abuses, we can’t take it any more,” charged one demonstrator after the incident. “The Chadians are terrorists. They are killing us like animals,” said another distraught young woman. “We don’t want these Chadian MISCA troops.”
In Paris the foreign ministry called for light to be shed on the shooting, while calling Deby “an essential partner” who “has the full confidence of France.”
“France hopes that light will be shed on the conditions of the use of force against demonstrators,” said the ministry’s deputy spokesman Vincent Floreani.
But France’s own 1,600 troops in the country were under the spotlight after a weekend incident in which three former rebels were shot dead in the capital.
The French army said its troops opened fire in Bangui on Sunday against “a group of half-a-dozen people suspected of being ex-Seleka” and who “were preparing to use their weapons”.
But the CAR presidency said on Monday that the three were “members of the presidential guard”, whose shooting was unprovoked.
“They were killed in cold blood by members of Sangaris,” presidential spokesman Guy Simplice Kodegue said using the codename of the French force.
“This was not a disarmament operation and no shots were fired, contrary to what was reported in certain French media,” Kodegue added.
AFP