Kuwait Times

European Union trains ‘credible army’ in CAR

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BANGUI: With EU help, the Central African Republic (CAR) is seeking to turn the page on years of bloodshed by retraining its army and by month’s end a first battalion is to present arms. The European Union last year unveiled the launch of a two-year military training mission for CAR troops in the capital Bangui, along the lines of similar assistance in conflict-hit Somalia and Mali. Some 70 instructor­s have been tasked with whipping the army into shape and rendering it democratic­ally accountabl­e following its failure to prevent a three-year civil war between mainly Muslim former rebels and mostly Christian militias, that started in 2013.

President Faustin-Archange Touadera took office a year ago to oversee the transition to peace in one of the world’s poorest nations, where the conflict has displaced about 900,000 people in a population of some 4.7 million. Much of CAR is still lawless today, and independen­t UN expert Marie-Therese Keita-Bocoum in February deplored that “armed groups have taken over more than 60 percent of the country”. General Herman Ruys, the Belgian officer in command of the EU’s military advisor team, expects the first force of CAR troops to be ready for active service by mid-May. “The battalion is about 700 strong, comprising three companies and the general staff,” says Ruys, who announced that two more battalions will follow, bringing the total force to around 2,000 troops.

Arms embargo

A 12,500-strong UN peacekeepi­ng mission is currently the sole functionin­g military force, given that the national army is under an internatio­nal arms embargo. The soldiers are being trained at the Kassai military camp just outside Bangui, which was occupied by mainly Muslim Seleka rebels at the outset of the civil war that began in 2013 when they overthrew president Francois Bozize. A counter-insurgency by mostly Christian militias saw the conflict spiral into a war that left thousands dead, but the majority of casualties were civilians.

At Kassai, French and Swedish instructor­s monitor trainee soldiers as they engage in target practice with AK-47 assault rifles. “Not bad. But there’s no bullet in the head,” one young Swedish instructor notes as he inspects the bullet-ridden targets. A few hundred meters away, Captain Innoncent Masse, commander of the army’s third territoria­l infantry battalion, closely watches a drill exercise. The soldiers wear a motley collection of camouflage uniforms and carry weapons that don’t work. Some were recovered from armed groups by the UN Mine Action Service, says communicat­ions officer Sebastien Isern.

“Most of the troops are not novices, but they haven’t seen action for a long time. It’s not just about training individual­s but getting them to work as a team,” Ruys says. UN peacekeepe­rs vetted the soldiers to determine if they had committed human rights abuses during the civil war. CAR’s armed forces were formed after independen­ce from France in 1960, but mutinied several times against autocratic rulers, some of whom ran their own parallel ethnically-based militia. — AFP

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