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Sunday, March 24, 2013

BANGUI FALLS APART!

Oman Observer

Central African Republic capital falls to rebels, Bozize flees

Mon, 25 March 2013


BANGUI — Rebels in Central African Republic seized control of the country's riverside capital Bangui yesterday, forcing President Francois Bozize to flee into neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo, government officials said.
At least six South African soldiers were killed in clashes with the rebels, a witness said. A United Nations source said the force, in the country to train the army along with hundreds of regional peacekeepers, was preparing to leave.
The Seleka rebel coalition resumed hostilities this week in the mineral-rich former French colony, vowing to oust Bozize, whom it accused of breaking a January peace agreement to integrate its fighters into the army.
The landlocked country, racked by rural rebellions for more than a decade, has extensive and unprotected borders and the rebel advance added to instability in the heart of Africa.
As the loose coalition of rebels — some of them former rivals — tightened their grip on Bangui, it was unclear who would replace Bozize or whether the power-sharing government of Prime Minister Nicolas Tiangaye would remain in place.
"The rebels control the town," said presidency spokesman Gaston Mackouzangba. "I hope there will not be any reprisals."
Government spokesman Crepin Mboli-Goumba said the Seleka rebels controlled all the strategic locations in the city.
A presidential adviser, who asked not to be named, said Bozize had crossed the Oubangi river into Congo yesterday morning as rebel forces headed for the presidential palace. Bozize had seized power in a 2003 military coup.
A United Nations official in Congo said Kinshasa's government asked the UN refugee agency to help move 25 members of Bozize's family out of the border town of Zongo yesterday.
Congo's Information Minister Lambert Mende told Reuters President Bozize was not among the family members who arrived in Zongo and said his arrival in the country had not been announced to Congolese authorities.
"The palace has just fallen. We have the palace," Eric Massi, a Seleka spokesman, said over 


telephone
 from Paris.
The rebels fought their way to the northern suburbs of the riverside capital late on Saturday before an overnight lull in the fighting. But residents said heavy weapons fire erupted across Bangui around 8 AM (0700 GMT).
Massi said the rebels had broken through a line of South African soldiers during their push into the city.
Around 400 South African troops are currently in the country. "I saw the bodies of six South African soldiers. They had all been shot. Their vehicles were also destroyed. Other South African soldiers came to recover the bodies," a Reuters witness said.
Regional peacekeeping sources said the South Africans had fought alongside the Central African Republic's army on Saturday.
"I can not 
confirm
 that we were fighting alongside (the CAR army) but we fell under attack and we defended ourselves and we repulsed the attackers," South African army spokesman Brigadier-General Xolani Mabanga told private South African news channel eENCA. He said he could give no further details of the incident, saying it was an "operational matter."
A source with the United Nations in Bangui said South African troops were preparing to leave
the country. — Reuters


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