Man lynched at army ceremony in Central African Republic

Victim of incident, which happened as president vowed to restore security, suspected of being a rebel

Central African Army Forces soldiers gather during a speech by interim president  Catherine Samba-Panza  at the National College of Administration and Magistrature in the capital Bangui today. Photograph: Siegfried Modola/Reuters.
Central African Army Forces soldiers gather during a speech by interim president Catherine Samba-Panza at the National College of Administration and Magistrature in the capital Bangui today. Photograph: Siegfried Modola/Reuters.

A group of soldiers in Central African Republic’s capital today lynched a man whom they suspected of having been a rebel, minutes after hearing the new president promise to restore security at a ceremony to reinstate the divided country’s armed forces.

Reuters reported that about 20 uniformed soldiers accused a member of the crowd at a training centre in the capital Bangui of having belonged to Seleka, the mostly Muslim rebel group that seized power in a coup last March.

They then stabbed him repeatedly until he was dead. A soldier stamped on the lifeless body, which was then dragged nearly naked through the streets as residents looked on and took photographs.

Peter Bouckaert, emergencies director at Human Rights Watch (HRW) in Bangui, tweeted that the corpse of the lynched man had been burned. He posted a photograph showing a man holding up a severed limb next to a bonfire, as an armed French soldier gestured in the background.

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Ten minutes earlier, about 20 metres away, the new interim president, Catherine Samba-Panza, had addressed the crowd of at least 1,000 soldiers at a ceremony meant to re-present the army to the nation after it effectively disappeared from view during Seleka’s rule.

“Within a month, I would like to fully secure the greater part of the country, and I aim to stick to my word,” she said.

Ms Samba-Panza, appointed to lead the country to elections next February two weeks ago after coup leader Michel Djotodia stepped down under intense international pressure, made clear it would take time to restore order.

“At a certain point, everyone will be held responsible for their acts. I am warning troublemakers who continue to sow disorder in the country,” she said.

Seleka’s 10-month occupation of cities and towns across the country has been marked by rampant looting, torture and murder.

The deep resentment they spawned among the Christian majority led to the formation of Christian “anti-balaka” militias, meaning “anti-machete” in the local Sango language, further fanning the flames of inter-religious bloodshed.

About 1 million people, a quarter of the former French colony's population, have fled their homes. And the presence of 1,600 French soldiers and 5,000 African troops has so far failed to stop the tit-for-tat violence, which the United Nations says has already killed more than 2,000 people.

Reuters