Chadian civilians flee attacks, threats in Bangui

Chadians were seen piling into a convoy of several dozen cars and taxis in the capital Bangui under the taunts of angry residents looking on.

By (AFP)

  • Follow us on
  • google-news
  • whatsapp
  • telegram

Published: Sat 28 Dec 2013, 3:02 PM

Last updated: Tue 7 Apr 2015, 3:25 PM

Hundreds of Chadian civilians prepared Saturday to flee to their home country after facing repeated attacks and threats from majority Christians in the strife-torn Central African Republic.

The Chadians were seen piling into a convoy of several dozen cars and taxis in the capital Bangui under the taunts of angry residents looking on.

French peacekeepers kept the protesters at a distance from the convoy as the Chadians jostled to cram their personal belongings into the cars.

A first convoy of Chadian civilians left Friday, also under the jeers of angry protesters.

Military and humanitarian officials said at least one civilian was killed and several children were wounded when Chadian soldiers protecting the convoy threw grenades into the crowd.

French and African troops — including a Chadian contingent — are struggling to contain the unrest that has wracked the impoverished country since Michel Djotodia was installed as interim president after a March coup.

More than 1,000 people are believed to have been killed in three weeks of sectarian violence in Bangui alone.

Soldiers from mainly Chad, which lies to the north of the Central African Republic , have been accused of siding with the rebel force, and the African Union has said the Chadians will redeploy outside the capital to avoid tensions.

The accusations have been fanned by several incidents, including one on Monday when Burundian troops in the African Union force said Chadian soldiers opened fire on them as they were disarming former rebels.

The same day, Chadian peacekeepers fired on a stone-throwing crowd, killing one man and wounding around 40 more.


More news from