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Africa Subsaharan
10 Killed in Religious Clashes in Central African Republic
2015-08-23
[AnNahar] Ten people were killed and five others injured Friday in religious festivities in the Central African Republic, police said.

A local police official, speaking on condition of anonymity
... for fear of being murdered...
, said the festivities in the central region of Bambari broke out following the death of a young Moslem who was "beaten by armed individuals identified as (Christian) anti-balaka Death Eaters."

He added that the murder "has sparked reprisals from young Moslems and former Seleka
...a 'mainly' Moslem rebel force in the Central African Republic that overthrew the govt, imposed a regime of rapine and looting on the country's non-Moslem population, and was then tossed by France. They still exist, getting funding and weapons from somewhere or other, licking their wounds, complaining about the oppression of Moslems, and occasionally raping and looting someone...
(Moslem rebels) in several non-Moslem neighborhoods of the town," and said the attacks had taken place a few dozen kilometers from the town of Bambari.

"We have a provisional toll of ten dead and five injured," the official said.

Witnesses reached by telephone said that residents began shooting in a bid to regain control of the area, where several thousand people remain.

The situation on the ground remains very tense, with young Christians and Moslems "putting up barricades in some places to protect themselves from gunfire," a witness said.

The Central African Republic descended into bloodshed after a 2013 coup against longtime leader Francois Bozize that unleashed a wave of violence in the former French colony, pitting Christian anti-balaka militias against Moslem Seleka rebels.

Driven from power in January 2014 following an international military intervention, the former Seleka rebel coalition had based its top commanders in Bambari, an area that has regularly been shaken by sectarian violence ever since.

Unlike the capital Bangui, which was restored to relative calm several months ago, many areas in the provinces remain lawless, stalked by gangs and bandidos.
Posted by:trailing wife

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