Los Angeles Times

In Central African Republic, rebels who disarm lack options

Many say it’s hard to stop fighting when there’s little other paid work. Some align with Russia’s Wagner.

- By Sam Mednick Mednick writes for the Associated Press.

BOUAR, Central African Republic — The bodies of children killed in the crossfire lay on the ground. It was too much for the rebel. After a year of fighting rivals across Central African Republic, he wanted out.

The 42-year-old took advantage of a nationwide program meant to help people like him lay down their guns. He trained in entreprene­urship, received a biweekly stipend of about $35 and was told to return to civilian life.

But there’s little normal life for veteran fighters in one of the world’s most volatile countries. He couldn’t find work, was shunned by his family for his violent past and was threatened by enemies. Two years later, he became a fighter again, this time helping Russian mercenarie­s combat the armed groups he had left.

Nearly 5,000 fighters have put down their arms in Central African Republic since the program launched about a decade ago. Yet former rebels and conflict experts say it’s hard to stop fighting in a country with little other paid work.

Central African Republic has been in conflict since 2013, when predominan­tly Muslim rebels seized power and forced the president from office. Mostly Christian militias fought back. A 2019 peace deal only lessened the fighting, and six of the 14 armed groups that signed later left the agreement.

Another armed presence is Wagner, the Russian mercenary group tasked with protecting the presidency and securing the country. Its fighters have been accused by rights groups and civilians of recruiting a local militia to help it battle rebels while committing abuses and exploiting the country’s rich mines and forests.

The Associated Press spoke with four fighters in the western city of Bouar and the capital, Bangui, who went through the program to disarm. One is the 42year-old, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

Central African Republic’s government estimates that up to 15% of those who go through the program return to armed groups; it is not clear if those groups include Wagner. The United Nations, which piloted and supports the program, said it loses track of about 70% of people who participat­e.

Experts call the program shortsight­ed, with combatants given few viable options beyond fighting. Nearly 70% of people in Central African Republic live in extreme poverty, according to the World Bank.

Former fighters are recruited by Wagner or return to communitie­s that are marginaliz­ed or attacked by security forces and Wagner allies, “which can easily cause them to take up arms again,” said researcher Alexandra Lamarche of the University of Montreal.

Neither option will lead to lasting peace, she said.

The disarmamen­t program began in 2015 as a pilot initiative by the U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission. Three years later, it expanded, and the government took over.

The program encourages fighters to lay down their arms and dissuades potential recruits.

To join, fighters must hand in a gun or several hundred cartridges of ammunition. They are given the choice of joining the security forces or doing vocational training.

But former combatants say the training isn’t long enough to learn a skill, and the army doesn’t take everyone.

Anatol Clement Bannem, the U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission’s program coordinato­r in Bouar, said many fighters who leave armed groups wait for months to enter the program. He has 10 people waiting to join in Bouar.

“I have weapons here that have been given to me some three months ago, and yet the people do not know where they are going,” Bannem said.

Conflict hurts the program’s consistenc­y, said Jules Gautier Ngbapo, its communicat­ions officer. In Bouar, the program stopped six months after it began in 2017, because rebel leaders objected, and restarted only after the peace deal.

Boundaries between armed groups can be fluid. A report last year by the investigat­ive group the Sentry found that some militia members fighting alongside Wagner had been formally integrated into the military. A 2022 U.N. report said the national defense forces recruited some fighters and used them as proxies.

Internatio­nal Crisis Group researcher Charles Bouessel said he has spoken with several rebels who went through the disarmamen­t program and then were recruited by Wagner and the government in Bangui and the Ouaka region.

“This raises the question of the purpose and credibilit­y of government disarmamen­t programs,” Bouessel said. He warned that the practice could fuel tensions, and allied armed groups could turn against the government.

The government says only former combatants who have officially reintegrat­ed into the army work with Wagner.

“We don’t work with militia . ... It’s the national army that recruits and gives [people] to Wagner. Then Wagner can choose among the soldiers,” said Fidele Gouandjika, special advisor to the president.

But the former fighter now working with Wagner said he never went through military training after the disarmamen­t program. He asserted, without providing evidence, that the government quietly pays him about $130 a month to help Wagner locate mines to exploit and collect informatio­n about rebels.

The Russians “wanted me to work with them since I had fought as a rebel,” he said.

The Russian government did not respond to a request for comment. The special advisor to the president denied that the account was true.

The World Bank, which has invested about $30 million in the program since 2017 and has committed $90 million more until 2028, said that it is aware of such allegation­s but that its funding goes through internatio­nal partners, not the government.

A U.S. State Department spokespers­on said the U.S. has given more than $3.5 million to the program since 2016, but the money will end this year, calling it a step toward the Central African Republic’s ownership of the process.

The U.S. spokespers­on was familiar with reports that Wagner recruits from armed groups and considers them “credible.”

Former fighters who haven’t returned to conflict say they struggle.

Sitting beside an idle sewing machine that she received in training, Carole said she doesn’t feel comfortabl­e making clothes, afraid she’ll make a mistake after receiving little instructio­n. She gave only her first name out of fear of reprisal.

The 32-year-old joined rebels in 2013 after other fighters attacked Bouar, killing her parents. She worked as a cook but escaped after watching fellow rebels decapitate two rivals.

Now she works in the market, barely supporting her three children. She worries that her 15-year-old son might be recruited to fight by armed groups operating about 30 miles from town.

“The threat is the lack of jobs and poverty. Some people wake up and only have coffee all day,” said Lazare Ouango, a local chief.

He said he spent months going door-to-door to explain the importance of accepting former combatants; many traumatize­d residents didn’t trust fighters to return peacefully.

Wilson Koudinguer­e hung his head as he listed some of the civilians he killed during his years with armed groups. “We did so many bad things,” he said.

Lifting his shirt, he pointed to a scar where his commander shot him when he first tried to leave, he said. He left in 2018 and trained with the army. But he wasn’t recruited.

He now survives off handouts from friends and family and looks for work, determined never to fight again.

 ?? Sam Mednick Associated Press ?? U.N. PEACEKEEPE­RS guard a market in Bouar, Central African Republic. Nearly 5,000 fighters have taken part in a disarmamen­t program launched in 2015. Yet many return to fighting or struggle to find other work.
Sam Mednick Associated Press U.N. PEACEKEEPE­RS guard a market in Bouar, Central African Republic. Nearly 5,000 fighters have taken part in a disarmamen­t program launched in 2015. Yet many return to fighting or struggle to find other work.

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