One killed, dozens wounded in clashes in Central African Republic

One killed, dozens wounded in clashes in Central African Republic

by Joseph Anthony
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A Central African Republic flag is seen on a gun, which is diplayed among other arms confiscated by the French military of Operation Sangaris at a French military base in Bangui on February 28, 2014. REUTERS/Sia Kambou/Pool

 At least one civilian was killed and dozens of United Nations peacekeepers, civilians and militia fighters were injured during an operation against armed groups in Central African Republicโ€™s capital on Sunday, a U.N. spokesman said.

Heavy gunfire erupted in Banguiโ€™s PK5 neighourhood – a Muslim enclave in the majority Christian city – at around 2 a.m., (0100 GMT) witnesses said, as peacekeepers and domestic security forces moved in to dismantle militia bases there.

Clashes continued into Sunday morning and smoke rose from the neighbourhood as residents fled to safety in other parts of the capital.

โ€œWe were sleeping at around 2.15 when we heard heavy and light weapons fire. This morning we saw (U.N.) and Central African soldiers in our alley,โ€ said PK5 resident Abdoulaye Hamat.

โ€œThey pulled out and we donโ€™t exactly know what happened.โ€

Herve Verhoosel, a spokesman for the MINUSCA peacekeeping mission, said 11 peacekeepers were wounded.

Around 20 people – both civilians and fighters – were also injured, he said. It was unclear if the government forces involved in the operation suffered casualties.

Verhoosel said eight fighters had been arrested on Sunday.

In a separate statement, MINUSCA said PK5โ€™s residents had repeatedly called on the mission to stamp out armed groups responsible for extortion and attacks on civilians.

โ€œThese criminal groups were provided the opportunity to voluntarily disarm,โ€ it said.

โ€œUnfortunately, the leaders of the groups refused this option.โ€

MINUSCA said it raided the bases of several PK5 groups, made arrests and seized weapons, ammunition and drugs.

โ€œThis joint operation will continue until the criminal groups of PK5 are dismantled or otherwise disappear,โ€ the statement said.

Central African Republic was torn apart after mainly Muslim Seleka rebels ousted president Francois Bozize in 2013, provoking retaliation killings by โ€œanti-balakaโ€ armed groups, drawn largely from Christian communities.

Self-styled Muslim self-defence groups sprang up in PK5, claiming to protect the Muslim civilians concentrated there against ethnic cleansing.

Gunmen fired on a group of Portuguese peacekeepers on patrol in PK5 on April 1, and MINUSCA later called on fighters there to lay down their weapons, warning that action would be taken if they did not comply.

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