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AFRICA NEWS
C.Africa government inks peace deal with militias
By Abdelmoneim Abu Idris Ali
Khartoum (AFP) Feb 5, 2019

C. Africa: 14 armed groups for one poor country
Libreville (AFP) Feb 5, 2019 - The Central African Republic's government and 14 militias that hold sway over most of the country inked a peace agreement in Khartoum Tuesday -- the eighth since violence broke out in 2012.

Armed groups hold territory of varying sizes, seized since a 2013 coup that ousted president Francois Bozize and plunged the country in a deep and prolonged crisis.

In all, the armed groups control about 80 percent of the CAR.

The armed forces and a UN peacekeeping mission, MINUSCA, work to prevent daily violence. With some 11,650 troops and 2,080 police deployed, according to the United Nations, MINUSCA's top priority is to protect civilians.

The largely Muslim Seleka ("alliance") coalition that toppled General Bozize was officially dissolved in 2013.

Two former Seleka self-proclaimed generals have since formed influential movements: the Popular Front for the Renaissance of the Central African Republic (FPRC) and the Unity for Peace in Central African Republic (UPC).

- Powerful groups from Seleka -

The FPRC is led politically by Noureddine Adam, while Abdoulaye Hissene is the military chief. Both men are under UN sanctions. The force is based in the far north of the CAR, including the towns of Birao and Ndele, but its influence extends southwards via Kaga Bandoro to Bria, a central region rich in mineral resources.

Commanded by Ali Darassa, the UPC is based in the heart of the country, at Alindao and Bambari. The group battled the FPRC for control of central CAR until October 2017, when they signed a pact to cease hostilities and became allies.

A third former Seleka general retains considerable influence: Mahamat Al-Khatim, a native of neighbouring Chad who in 2015 founded the Central African Patriotic Movement (MPC).

Allied with both the FPRC and the UPC, the MPC is based at Kabo and along the Chadian border in the north.

- Scattered anti-Balaka forces -

The "anti-Balaka" militia groups that emerged in largely Christian communities as a response to the capture of Bangui by Seleka forces declared that their main role was "self-defence".

Today, these militias are divided into two branches.

One is led by Patrice-Edouard Ngaissona, a former "coordinator" of armed groups, who retains influence though he was transferred early in January to the International Criminal Court in The Hague on suspicion of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Ngaissona is considered close to Bozize, who is living in exile.

The other branch of anti-Balaka forces is led by Maxime Mokom, who is under US sanctions and formed an alliance with former Seleka groups in 2015, signing an alliance in Nairobi.

This opportunistic pact gave the two parties control over a large swathe of territory and also included the armed Patriotic Rally for the Renewal of the Central African Republic (RPRC), a small group based at Bria in diamond country.

- On the cattle trails -

In the west and northwest, armed groups with a few hundred fighters at most are installed along the routes taken by cattle herders on seasonal migrations across the borders of Chad and Cameroon.

They include the Return, Reclamation, Rehabilitation (3R) movement created in 2016 by Abass Sidiki in the Nana-Mambete district.

The groups Revolution justice (RJ) and the National Movement for the Liberation of the Central African Republic (MNLC) led by ex-Seleka officer Ahmat Bahar, are also active in the zone, rich in gold and diamonds, together with the Democratic Front of the Central African People (FPDC).

The government of the Central African Republic and 14 armed groups inked a new peace accord on Tuesday seeking to end years of fighting that have left thousands of people dead.

The accord was initialled by President Faustin-Archange Touadera for the CAR government and by representatives of militias that control most of the chronically-troubled country.

It will be formally signed on Wednesday morning in the country's capital Bangui, CAR authorities said of the agreement whose terms were not immediately revealed.

"The contents will be made public after the signature," the head of the CAR government delegation, Firmin Ngrebada, said.

There was also no word on what compromises may have been needed to achieve the accord.

"The Khartoum Agreement opens the door for peace to return to our homeland," Touadera declared at the ceremony. "It is now time to open a new page for Central Africa. Let's go together to Bangui to build our country together."

The agreement, brokered by the African Union after 18 months of exploratory work and sponsored by the UN, is the eighth attempt in almost six years to forge peace in a country stricken by turmoil and poverty.

Thousands of people have been killed and a quarter of the population of 4.5 million have fled their homes.

The UN says unrest has driven so many people from their farms that hundreds of thousands are at risk of famine.

Herbert Gontran Djono Ahaba, speaking on behalf of the armed groups, said: "The difficult time starts now, and that is implementing the Khartoum Agreement... This agreement is crucial for peace."

Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir said his country was delighted to have hosted the talks and vowed to "continue to be a partner" in peace efforts.

After the agreement was initialled, representatives of the armed groups shook hands with Touadera and Bashir.

Past stumbling blocks in peace negotiations have include rebel demands for an amnesty, something that the CAR government, under pressure from Western allies, has refused.

After the deal was announced on Saturday, Aboubakar Sidik, spokesman for one of the main armed factions, the Popular Front for the Rebirth of Central African Republic (FPRC), said "a consensus has been reached on sticking points which were an amnesty and an inclusive government".

- Troubled country -

The history of peacemaking in the CAR is littered with failures. All seven previous agreements have failed to stick.

The last attempt, in 2017, was forged with the help of the Catholic church, but fighting resumed within a day, leaving a hundred people killed in the central town of Bria.

In Bangui, local resident Ambroise Saraga said hopes were high that this deal stood a better chance.

"This is what we've been expecting, that two sides who do not get along meet around a (negotiating) table," he said.

At citizens' meetings and forums around the country, many members of the public had expressed "zero tolerance" for those who committed crimes and violence, he said.

The Khartoum talks began on January 24 after several false starts because of outstanding differences. A major sticking point was the creation of a mechanism to follow up any peace agreement.

The CAR began its descent into turmoil in 2012, when a mainly Muslim rebel movement called the Seleka rose in the country's north.

The following year, insurgents overthrew President Francois Bozize, a Christian -- a move that triggered the rise of a predominantly Christian militia called the anti-Balaka.

Fearing a Rwandan-style genocide, former colonial ruler France intervened militarily under a UN mandate.

The Seleka were forced from power and in February 2016, Touadera, a former prime minister, was elected president.

But Touadera only controls a fraction of the state, despite the support of more than 13,000 troops and police in the UN's MINUSCA mission.

Eighty percent of the country is held by militias, who typically portray themselves as defenders of a community or religious group but often fight over mineral wealth -- a hoard that ranges from gold to uranium and diamonds.


Related Links
Africa News - Resources, Health, Food


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AFRICA NEWS
C.Africa peace talks suspended: govt
Bangui, Central African Republic (AFP) Feb 1, 2019
Peace negotiations between armed militias and the government of Central African Republic have been suspended, mainly over the issue of amnesty, a governmental source told AFP Friday. The latest round of peace talks sponsored by the African Union had opened in the Sudanese capital Khartoum on January 24. "There has been a suspension of negotiations as the parties wanted to consult and agree among themselves on questions related to amnesty, which shouldn't be part of the discussions, and on the qu ... read more

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