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AFRICA NEWS
Bangui residents guide French troops in weapons hunt
by Staff Writers
Bangui, Central African Republic (AFP) Dec 09, 2013


US military to fly AU troops to C. Africa: officials
Washington (AFP) Dec 09, 2013 - The US military will help fly African Union peacekeeping troops to the Central African Republic as part of a French-led effort to restore security there, US officials said Monday.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, who was in Qatar on a tour of the region, has ordered American forces "to begin transporting forces from Burundi to the Central African Republic, in coordination with France," his spokesman said in a statement.

The Pentagon will make two C-17 transport planes available to transport roughly 850 Burundian soldiers, a US defense official said on condition of anonymity, noting: "We hope to start tomorrow."

The mission to ferry the troops and their equipment should be completed in a matter of days, the official said.

Hagel took the decision after conferring by phone on Sunday with French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, who requested "limited" US military assistance to support the international effort, spokesman Carl Woog said.

"In the near term, France has requested airlift support to enable African forces to deploy promptly to prevent the further spread of sectarian violence in the Central African Republic," he said.

"The United States is joining the international community in this effort because of our belief that immediate action is required to avert a humanitarian and human rights catastrophe in the Central African Republic, and because of our interest in peace and security in the region."

The United States would look to possibly provide "additional resources" if needed, the statement said, without offering details.

More than a year ago, the United States deployed about 100 special forces to the region to help Ugandan forces track warlord Joseph Kony and his Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) fighters.

The US troops are based in Uganda, but their search involves a stretch of jungle in the eastern corner of the Central African Republic.

The announcement from the Pentagon came as French troops on Monday started disarming fighters in the country after a spike in sectarian violence that claimed hundreds of lives.

In addition to the French contingent on the ground, the African Union plans to bolster a regional force to 6,000 troops from an initially planned 3,600.

The Pentagon offered similar assistance during the French intervention in Mali, providing cargo aircraft and sharing intelligence with their allies.

A swarm of Bangui residents trailed French troops as they began combing the streets for rogue rebels Monday, egging them on with a deluge of tips and tip-offs.

Almost every confiscated gun is met by cheers as units from France's 1,600-strong "Operation Sangaris" go door-to-door to find weapons.

"We're going from A to B, checking all vehicles and some homes, collecting intel," said one officer who goes by the name of Ludo.

"We seize all weapons. The machetes too are considered weapons, so we confiscate them," he said, a helicopter circling above his armoured convoy.

Sectarian killings left hundreds dead in recent days, many of them hacked to death, and residents of the Central African Republic's capital had shuttered themselves up waiting for the French army to move in.

French troops faced no resistance in claiming control of Bangui but on Monday they turned to the thornier task of disarming militiamen from the mainly Muslim Seleka group.

Near the airport, an exulting crowd looked on as gunmen lay face down on the ground as French soldiers lined up a booty of rocket-launchers and assault rifles.

The French mission is confined to disarming however and the suspects were soon released, to the dismay of a group anxious to see their tormentors bite the dust.

As the search party moved down Boganda, one of Bangui's main avenues, a crowd of residents formed in front of a soap factory they claimed was a Seleka hideout.

"There were a lot of Seleka here. Yesterday, they were shooting at four in the morning," said Bienvenue Goh, an office employee who lives nearby.

"They set out after dark and murder young men. They have treated us like cockroaches for months. The site needs to be searched and their weapons seized," she said.

"There are weapons in there," the excited crowd shouted as the soldiers entered the compound, their French-built Famas assault rifles strapped over their shoulders.

A watchman hailing from neighbouring Chad, which some among the CAR's majority Christians accuse of being behind Seleka, insisted he did not have the key to the main building.

"Tell him to open the door or we'll smash it down," a French lieutenant named Frederic ordered one of his men.

Another guard protested: "We are Muslims, that's why people accuse us."

The impoverished former French colony has been sliding into chaos since a March coup brought Seleka leader Michel Djotodia to power, making him the country's first Muslim president.

While some Seleka fighters remained loyal to him, others went rogue and committed atrocities that have inflamed religious tensions and sparked international concern.

Frustrated residents

The French soldiers eventually forced their way into the soap factory's main warehouse and uncovered a meagre three Kalashnikov bullets and a few military cots.

Bienvenue Goh was frustrated: "What good is it for us to point out these places if they don't do anything?"

"The Seleka will come back tonight and kill us in revenge," she said, explaining that she feared Seleka informants had spied on the scene.

The French officer tried to reassure the crowd.

"We are disarming. Before, the Seleka had weapons but now they are no longer allowed. If we see them, we'll arrest them.

"It's going to change. They can no longer do what they did before, and they know it."

A few streets further down, traders and shoppers were cautiously returning to the Lakouanga market but fear of a now invisible enemy was all minds.

"We hadn't been out in days. We're taking a risk here but we're hungry and with the French soldiers we are a little bit more confident, but I'm not able to get what I need," said Elise Nzale, standing before a few tomatoes, some rotten.

Another buyer, Arlette Papaye, argued that France's search units would have to probe deeper into Bangui's dark alleys if they want to flush out the Seleka.

"The French have to venture off the main thoroughfares and move deeper inside the neighbourhoods. If they don't, there's no point."

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AFRICA NEWS
1,600 French troops in CAR, no fresh clashes: army
Paris (AFP) Dec 08, 2013
About 1,600 French troops have deployed as planned in the Central African Republic, the army confirmed on Sunday, adding that no fresh clashes had occurred since Thursday. General staff spokesman Colonel Gilles Jaron said the troops were on the ground, with most in the capital Bangui and a few units deployed elsewhere. He said French troops had boosted patrols in Bangui and there was som ... read more


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