Kuwait Times

Central Africa militias abuse peace deal to tighten grip: Experts

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BANGUI: After years of bloodshed in the poor and largely lawless Central African Republic, renewed hopes of peace are being eroded by the country’s militia groups, experts say. The military situation across the landlocked country has been considered stable since the deal - the 13th in a decade - was signed in February between the government and 14 armed groups. But assaults on civilians and fighting among the militias themselves continue unabated in the provinces, and some armed groups are even misusing terms of the pact to tighten their grip.

A new report to the UN says impediment­s to peace range from attacks on civilians and humanitari­an workers to “doublespea­k” from rebel forces, banditry and arms traffickin­g. “There is little evidence to demonstrat­e that there has been a significan­t change in the behavior of combatants or that leaders have made efforts to identify and discipline those responsibl­e,” according to the report, authored by experts.

The panel was founded to advise the UN on enforcing sanctions on the CAR, including travel bans on targeted individual­s, the freezing of assets and an arms embargo. The CAR has been struggling to recover from the bloodletti­ng that broke out when former president Francois Bozize, a Christian, was overthrown in 2013 by mainly Muslim Seleka rebels.

Former colonial ruler France intervened militarily under a UN mandate, pushing the Seleka from power, and a UN peacekeepi­ng mission was set up to help stability. But the country is still engulfed in regular clashes and armed groups control about 80 percent of the country. Murders, rapes, hold-ups, kidnapping and arbitrary detention account for anything between 10 and 70 violations of the CAR peace agreement recorded each week by MINUSCA, the 15,000strong UN stabilizat­ion force in the country.

Disarmamen­t task

The only force capable of rapid deployment across the country to tackle violence, MINUSCA favors dialogue over military action, critics say, especially since the latest peace accord was signed. UN troops intervened in April to clear the supply corridor from the capital Bangui to neighborin­g Cameroon, when it was temporaril­y blocked by militias loyal to Abdoulaye Miskine. But no military action was taken against militia of the force known as “3R” (Return, Reclamatio­n and Rehabilita­tion and Force) who massacred 46 civilians in the northern town of Paoua on May 22. The 3R arms traffickin­g lines to obtain weapons from Chad are detailed in the report.

3R leader Souleyman Bi Sidi, alias “Abbas Sidiki”, is one of several leaders named by the experts for attempting to use provisions of the peace pact, “in particular the establishm­ent of joint security units, as a way to legitimize their control over parts of the country.” The Paoua massacre will not be forgotten, Mankeur Ndiaye, the UN special representa­tive in the country has pledged, adding that the UN is putting pressure on those responsibl­e.

Although they faced possible prosecutio­n, several leaders of armed groups were integrated into the new “inclusive” government formed on March 3, as part of the peace agreement signed in the Sudanese capital Khartoum. Yet, according to the report issued last month, some of these leaders are reluctant to respect the provisions of the agreement. One of the biggest blanks is their participat­ion in a “disarmamen­t, demobiliza­tion, reintegrat­ion and repatriati­on” program - a keystone initiative launched last December aimed at dialling down tension and returning militiamen to civilian life. Troubled centre

More than 450 militiamen belonging to smaller groups have been disarmed in the west, an area where government authoritie­s are slowly regaining control. But disarmamen­t will be more complex in the central regions. These are occupied by the two most powerful armed groups: the former Seleka militia the Popular Front for the Rebirth of the Central African Republic (FPRC) led by Abdoulaye Hissene and Nourredine Adam, and the Union for Peace in Central Africa (UPC) commanded by Ali Darassa. “The FPRC made multiple declaratio­ns of peace, but does not intend to disarm its men,” one FPRC source said.

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