Mindanao Times

Clashes leave 30 dead

-

AT LEAST 30 people were killed in fighting between militiamen and traders in a restive district of Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic, a security official and a local imam said Thursday.

“Thirty bodies have been brought to the mosque,” said Awad Al Karim, the imam of the Ali Babolo mosque in a district called PK5 that became a haven for many Bangui Muslims at the peak of Christian-Muslim clashes in the country.

A security official, who asked to remain anonymous, also put the number of dead at at least 30, without providing any further details.

The fighting began after traders in the district took up arms to oppose taxes levied by militia groups, the imam said.

Bursts of automatic fire and explosions were heard on Wednesday evening and on Thursday morning, according to an

AFP journalist who was in a neighbouri­ng district.

The head of the African Red Cross, Antoine Mbaobogo, said the toll “stood at 23 at 4:00 pm but could now be 33,” adding that there were still bodies near the market.

Neither the UN peacekeepi­ng force MINUSCA nor the CAR authoritie­s have been able to assert control over the PK5 district.

And MINUSCA did not provide any exact toll from

the fighting, saying only there had been “dozens of victims”.

MINUSCA spokesman, Bili Aminou Alao, said a rapid response force had been sent to the area.

“Part of the market and some vehicles have been burned,” he said.

“Between 40 and 50 shops have been burned down, as well as four or five houses,” said Patrick Bidilou Niabode, head of the CAR’s civil protection service.

Voluntary firefighte­rs put out two fires which had been spreading in the market but were unable to tackle a blaze at two houses because of heavy gunfire, he added.

- Powder keg The CAR is one of the world’s poorest and most volatile countries.

It has been gripped by sporadic violence since 2014, after then-president Francois Bozize was ousted in a coup.

Fierce fighting then erupted between predominan­tly Christian and Muslim militia, prompting the interventi­on of former colonial power France, under a UN mandate.

Attempts to broker a lasting peace have repeatedly broken down and most the country lies in the hands of armed groups, who often fight over the country’s mineral resources.

The PK5 district is a powder keg. In April 2018, MINUSCA, responding to appeals by local traders, launched an anti-militia operation named Sukula (“Clean-up” in the CAR language of Sango).

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? LIBYANS check the site of an air strike in the town of Zawiya, 45 kilometres (30 miles) west of Tripoli which killed at least two civilians and wounded 20 others, a local official said. It comes amid heightened tensions between the UN-recognized government of National Accord based in Tripoli and rival forces answering to strongman Khalifa Haftar who is based in the country’s east, and as Turkey said it could deploy troops in Libya to support the GNA.
AFP PHOTO LIBYANS check the site of an air strike in the town of Zawiya, 45 kilometres (30 miles) west of Tripoli which killed at least two civilians and wounded 20 others, a local official said. It comes amid heightened tensions between the UN-recognized government of National Accord based in Tripoli and rival forces answering to strongman Khalifa Haftar who is based in the country’s east, and as Turkey said it could deploy troops in Libya to support the GNA.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines