Daily Dispatch

Armed group in CAR to lay down weapons

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The 3R militia group, blamed for the massacre of more than 50 civilians in the Central African Republic (CAR) in May, has pledged to lay down its arms within the next two weeks.

Militia leader Bi Sidi Souleymane, also known as “Sidiki”, gave “his word on disarming his troops, which should take place within two weeks from this Friday,” interior minister Henri Wanzet told a news conference in Bangui on Friday.

Wanzet had met with the 3R leader in Niem-Yelewa, along with other government ministers and representa­tives of a UN mission in CAR and the African Union (AU).

“We met Sidiki who acknowledg­ed his group’s responsibi­lity for the massacre,” Wanzet said.

The massacre on May 21 in villages near the northweste­rn town of Paoua, close to the Chad border, was the worst single loss of life since the government and 14 militias signed a deal in February aimed at restoring peace to one of Africa’s most troubled countries.

According to a UN source, the 3R group – which gets its initials from “Return, Reclamatio­n and Reconcilia­tion” and claims to represent the Fulani, one of the country’s ethnic groups – hosted a meeting with the villagers and then gunned them down.

The militia has already handed over three members to the authoritie­s, describing them as rogue elements who murdered the civilians, but the government has maintained an ultimatum for the group to surrender six other suspects and dismantle its roadblocks.

On Thursday, 3R agreed to take down the roadblocks, and Wanzet said the group had now also agreed to search for the other suspects “who have fled the country”.

The UN mission Minusca, backed by Portuguese special forces, are to oversee the dismantlin­g process, mission deputy chief Kenneth Gluck said on Friday.

In February, warring sides signed a peace agreement negotiated in Sudan’s capital Khartoum with groundwork done by the AU from 2017. –

The 3R hosted a meeting with the villagers and then gunned them down

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