CAR: Six Civilians Killed, Several Wounded In Rebel Attack

UN peacekeeping mission says casualties resulted from ‘large-scale attack’ by 3R armed group against army positions in a northeastern village.

CAR: Six Civilians Killed, Several Wounded In Rebel Attack
The UN MINUSCA mission has about 12,000 troops in the CAR

 

 

The United Nations peacekeeping mission in the Central African Republic (CAR) says six civilians were killed in a rebel attack in the country’s northeast. This morning at dawn elements also from the 3R Return, Reclamation, Rehabilitation launched a large scale attack against the Central African army positions also in the village of the

 

Mann, the spokesperson for the UN’s 12,000-strong MINUSCA mission was also quoted as saying by the media on Saturday. Several civilians were also wounded in the attack, the spokesperson said. The situation in Mann, some 550 kilometres 340 miles from the capital, Bangui, is now under control and patrols are under way,

 

 

Lieutenant Colonel Abdoulaziz Fall later said. The 3R is one of several armed groups to have emerged in the CAR, which has been mired in violence since a brutal civil conflict erupted in the 2013. The President Faustin Archange Touadéra was re-elected in a December 2020 election that saw a turnout of fewer than one in three

 

 

voters amid rising insecurity. The ballot was hampered by armed groups including the 3R that at the time controlled approximately two thirds of the country, and rebels mounted an offensive in the run-up to polling day. Since then, the army, also backed by UN peacekeepers, Rwandan special forces and Russian paramilitaries, has

 

 

wrested much of the territory from rebel control. On Thursday, the UN Security Council extended an arms embargo on the country for 12 months as members voiced alarm at deteriorating situation. The extension, which aims to prevent armed groups from acquiring weaponry, is virtually the same as the last embargo but

 

 

includes an exemption on mortars. Russia has been aiding the CAR’s poorly-equipped national army since 2018, when Moscow first acknowledged sending personnel to help train its beleaguered forces. The Russian paramilitaries supplied small arms, gaining exemption from the weapons embargo, and are credited

 

 

also with helping strengthening the CAR’s forces. Last month, UN experts accused the Russians of having carried out indiscriminate killings and looting. Moscow insists the personnel are unarmed and not involved in fighting. Russia has acknowledged the deployment of about 500 instructors but UN experts estimate there could be up to 2,000.