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Army recaptures Birao

Map of Central African Republic (CAR)
IRIN
Plusieurs cas de vandalisme et de vols à main armés se sont signalés à Bangui depuis le 15 mars, suite au coup d'Etat commandité par François Bozizé , un ancien chef d’état-major, qui a renversé le Président Ange-Félix Patassé
Government troops backed by the French army have retaken the northern town of Birao a month after it was captured by forces of the Union des forces démocratiques pour le rassemblement (UFDR), presidential press director Lord Esaie Nganamokoi said on Tuesday.

"The army is in full control," he told IRIN.

The army's next objective, he said, would be to retake the northern towns of Ouadda-Djalle, Ouadda and Sam-Ouandja, seized by UFDR forces when they began their insurrection on 31 October. After these towns fell, UFDR said its next target would be the mining town of Bria, 650 km northeast of Bangui, the capital.

Stunned by the rapid fall of these towns, the government appealed to France, its ally and former colonial power, for help. The CAR government said France provided logistical support to the army in the drive to retake Birao, a town of 30,000 residents.

The army is now conducting mopping-up operations in the town, which lies on the major trade route to Chad and Sudan and is thus vital to the region's commerce. A businessman in Bria, Abdel Karim Meyaki, told IRIN on Monday that army troops were moving towards Sam-Ouandja.

However, a spokesman for the UFDR denied on Tuesday it had lost Birao. "General Damane Zakaria, our chief of staff, is still in Birao," Diego Albator Yao, Zakaria's spokesman, said. "French soldiers and government troops are at the airport and are surrounded by our men."

Yao said the UFDR had no intention of attacking the French, as long as they did not interfere in the movement's internal affairs.

However, he added, "We are going to react militarily if we have any indication that French troops are interfering in the crisis by attacking our positions."

Despite the fighting, Yao said the UFDR was still ready to talk to the government. "We are ready to go to a negotiating table with the government to settle our domestic problems," Yao said.

The movement is asking for power-sharing, claiming that President François Bozize’s government has ostracised last parts of the population.

Meanwhile, in the northwest of the country the UFDR, headed by Michel Djotodia, claims to have captured the town of Ndele.

A high-ranking army officer and personal adviser in the entourage of Bozize confirmed this, but said the army was still trying to dislodge the enemy. The rebels’ capture of Ndele, capital of Bamingui-Bangoran Prefecture, followed the arrest six weeks ago of two leading UFDR officials in the West African nation of Benin.

At Bangui's request, the Beninese authorities arrested Detodia and its spokesman Abakar Saboune. They are expected to be returned to Bangui.

jb/oss/mw

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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