BANGUI, Dec 25 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Voters in the Central African Republic head to the polls on Sunday, with incumbent President Faustin Archange Touadera on course to win a second term in an impoverished country haunted by violence.
In the week before voting day, Touadera accused his predecessor Francois
Bozize of plotting a coup, a militia briefly seized the country’s fourth
biggest town, and Russia and Rwanda sent military personnel to help shore up his government.
The mood in the capital Bangui is unsurprisingly bleak.
On Wednesday, rumours circulated that rebels had entered the city, sparking moments of panic.
The UN’s human rights office on Wednesday said it was “deeply alarmed” at
accounts of escalating violence “stoked by political grievances and hate
speech,” and warned of a threat to the right to vote.
But Touadera, the UN, and the EU — including France, CAR’s former
coloniser and its staunchest Western ally — all fiercely insist the vote
will take place.
Mineral-rich but rated the world’s second-poorest country under the Human Development Index, the CAR has been chronically unstable since independence 60 years ago.
A civil war erupted in March 2013 when mostly Muslim rebels in a coalition
called Seleka stormed the capital and removed Bozize, a Christian and former general who had seized power a decade earlier.
Other groups, notably Christians and animists, then organised their own
militias, prompting fears of a genocide along sectarian lines.
France sent in some 2,000 soldiers under a UN mandate. In 2014, the UN sent its own mission, MINUSCA, and in 2016 elections were held, won by Touadera, a technocrat educated in France and Cameroon.
Today, the 63-year-old president is considered a shoo-in for a second term
after the CAR’s top court barred Bozize, who is on a 2014 wanted list and
under UN sanctions, from contesting the elections.
The nearest rival in the 16-strong field is Anicet Georges Dologuele, an
economist and former prime minister who is being backed by Bozize after his own bid fell through.
But a crucial question is that of voter participation — a low turnout will
badly dent the credibility of the next president and legislature, which is
also being elected.
In theory, 1.8 million people are entitled to cast ballots.
But only a third of the country is controlled by the government, which is
politically weak and whose armed forces are chronically under-equipped and poorly trained.
The remaining two-thirds are controlled by militias, who derive income from mining and “taxes” on travellers and traders and often fall out over these resources.
Touadera has had to engage in a tricky balancing act with the armed groups
since he first took office.
In February 2019, he signed a peace deal with 14 militias, in which their
chiefs were offered government positions.
The accord helped to support a decline in violence that had begun the
previous year, although bloodshed remains an ever-present threat.
Bozize, however, has added a further factor of volatility since he slipped
into the country in December 2019 after years in exile.
His return sparked fears that the 74-year-old is planning a violent
comeback.
The government last weekend accused groups of banding together and
advancing on Bangui in a plot allegedly fomented by Bozize, a charge he
denies.
The advance stopped after the rebels seized a few hamlets, the UN
peacekeeping force MINUSCA said on Wednesday.
In a statement dated Wednesday that was authenticated by two of its six
members, the rebel coalition announced a 72-hour “unilateral ceasefire.”
On Tuesday, the CAR’s fourth largest town, Bambari, 380 kilometres northeast of Bangui, was overrun by an armed group called the Unity
for Peace in Central Africa (UPC).
Security forces backed by UN peacekeepers regained control the following
day.
Since 2013, thousands of people have died and more than a quarter of the
population of 4.9 million have fled their homes. Of these, 675,000 are
refugees in neighbouring countries and cannot vote. — NNN-AGENCIES