Terrorism enters presidential elections in Central Africa
A sudden, widespread attack by armed groups in western
Central African Republic prompted the United Nations to deploy peacekeepers on
Friday, December 18, considering it a deliberate attempt to corrupt the
presidential and legislative elections that are supposed to take place on December
27.
Spokesman for the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated
Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA) Vladimir
Monteiro said that the mission deployed forces in Bossemptélé and Bossembélé,
two towns in the Ombella-M'Poko region, targeted by attacks by militants of the
Return, Reclamation, Rehabilitation (3R) group, the Central African Patriotic
Movement (MPC) and the Anti-Balaka movement.
These three major groups that control two-thirds of the
territory of the Central African Republic had threatened to attack the
authority of Central African President Faustin-Archange Touadera if he resorted
to fraud to win a second term.
Sources from humanitarian organizations and the United
Nations stated that armed groups have seized areas on the axes leading to the
capital, Bangui, which are under siege from a distance.
The UN mission said that the reinforcement of MINUSCA's
resources, including by air means, is a response to the violence committed by
these groups that also affected Yaloke and Bozoum, which are about 200 km from
Bangui, and resulted in the deaths of two members of the government forces.
On Friday, December 18, UN Secretary-General António
Guterres condemned the escalation of violence in the Central African Republic,
calling on all parties to urgently stop all forms of hostility.
Guterres called for any dispute to be resolved peacefully in
the interests of the people.
There is great tension in the Central Africa Republic, as
the regime of President Touadera accused former President François Bozize,
whose candidacy was rejected by the Constitutional Court, of preparing a plan
to destabilize the country, while the opposition fears major fraud in the
elections.
A civil war devastated the Central African Republic after a
coalition of armed groups, Seleka, overthrew the regime of General Bozize in
2013, and clashes between Seleka and Anti-Balaka militias resulted in thousands
of deaths.
Since 2018, the war has turned into a less intense conflict,
with armed groups competing for control of the country's resources, especially
livestock and minerals, while regularly committing violations against
civilians.
Bozize was suspected of organizing a bloody
counter-insurgency from his exile, but he remained extremely popular despite UN
sanctions accusing him of supporting Anti-Balaka militias, which, according to
the United Nations, committed war crimes and crimes against humanity in 2013
and 2014.
Armed groups control three-quarters of the Central African
Republic, which has a population of 4.9 million and is classified among the
world's poorest countries, although it is rich in diamonds. These armed groups
regularly commit violations against civilians.



