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Christian Militants Renew Attack on UN Base in Central African Republic

Hundreds of fighters took part in the attacks this weekend and killed at least 30 people.
Reuters
May 15 2017
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Hundreds of fighters took part in the attacks this weekend and killed at least 30 people.
Seleka fighters take a break as they sit on a pick-up truck in the town of Goya June 11, 2014. REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic
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Rebel fighters in the Central African Republic. Representational image. Credit: Goran Tomasevic/Reuters/files

Dakar: Militia fighters from the Central African Republic's (CAR) Christian minority attacked a UN base for the second consecutive night, a UN official said on Sunday, after a week of violence that has killed six peacekeepers at the southeastern border.

Access to the town centre of Bangassou to recover the wounded and the dead has been impeded by fighting although 24 injured people had been treated at a nearby hospital, medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières said.

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Fighting in and around Bangassou, in a region on the Congolese border previously sheltered from years of conflict, has also caused an undetermined number of civilian deaths. An attack on Monday on a UN convoy killed five peacekeepers.

Radio France International, citing a local source, said hundreds of fighters had taken part in the attacks this weekend and had killed at least 30 people. It was not immediately possibly to verify the toll.

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"They fired on the camp overnight and we responded," said Herve Verhoosel, spokesman for the UN mission (MINUSCA) by telephone from the capital Bangui. "We don't think that this is over and it is likely that the assailants return."

In recent months, roaming militias spurred by ethnic and religious rivalries have stepped up violence despite pledges to take part in a government-led disarmament programme.

Aid workers say that militias seem to be exploiting security voids after Ugandan and French soldiers left in the past few months when their missions ended.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said on Sunday he was "outraged" by the attacks on the 13,000-strong mission.

Prime Minister Simplice Sarandji condemned the attacks in a statement on local radio on Sunday and said those responsible would be brought to justice.

The Central African Republic has been plagued by inter-religious violence since 2013 when mainly Muslim Seleka fighters seized power and ousted then-President Francois Bozize, prompting reprisal killings from anti-balaka militias drawn from the Christian minority.

This article went live on May fifteenth, two thousand seventeen, at forty-one minutes past four in the afternoon.

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