Violence soars in CAR ahead of president's inauguration
Iran Press TV
Thu Jan 23, 2014 3:7PM GMT
Reports from the Central African Republic reveal extensive looting and violence against Muslims just hours ahead of the inauguration of the country's new interim president.
Witnesses said shops and properties belonging to Muslims have been targeted around the capital city of Bangui.
The violence follows an overnight outbreak of sectarian clashes in the city that claimed the lives of 10 people.
Catherine Samba-Panza, the former mayor of Bangui, is scheduled to be sworn in on Thursday and lead the transitional government in the impoverished African nation which is home to some 4.6 million people.
The CAR spiraled into chaos following a coup by the Muslim-majority Seleka rebels which ousted the country's former Christian president, Francoise Bozizé, in March 2013.
The country, however, plunged into deadly violence when Christian militias launched coordinated attacks on the mostly Muslim Seleka group last month.
Additionally, France invaded its former colony on December 5, 2013, after the UN Security Council adopted a resolution giving the African Union and France the go-ahead to send troops to the country.
Paris has deployed 1,600 troops to the country, but the UN-backed intervention force, which includes over 4,000 African Union peacekeepers, has so far failed to restore security in the Central African Republic.
On Wednesday, the UN special adviser on the prevention of genocide said the CAR faces a "high risk" of genocide and crimes against humanity.
The UN official, who visited the African country last month, also presented reports of "widespread and massive" human rights violations including summary executions, mutilation and sexual violence to the Security Council
MRS/AB
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