venerdì 6 dicembre 2013

French reinforcements land in Central African Republic


French reinforcements land in Central African Republic

French troops patrol in an armored vehicle in Bangui, Central African Republic, December 6, 2013. (Reuters / Emmanuel Braun)French troops patrol in an armored vehicle in Bangui, Central African Republic, December 6, 2013. (Reuters / Emmanuel Braun)


French reinforcements arrived in the restive Central African Republic to bolster France’s 600-strong force as military operations began overnight to quell violence in the capital and protect broader geostrategic interests in the country, analysts say.
French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told Radio France Internationale (RFI) that the streets of Bangui were calm on Friday after French patrols and a helicopter hit the streets of the capital early Friday, Reuters reports.

"The operation has effectively started," Le Drian told RFI regarding the French Patrols.

Just hours before the United Nations Security Council voted to send in French and African Union troops to stabilize the country on Thursday, violence between Muslim former rebels now running the country and a mixture of local Christian militiamen and fighters loyal to ousted President Francois Bozize reportedly left at least 105 dead.

The French-backed resolution authorizes the deployment of the African Union-led force for a year with a mandate to use “appropriate measures” to protect civilians and restore security. The AU force, known as the African-led International Support Mission in the Central African Republic (MISCA), is expected to increase its troop strength from about 2,500 to 3,500.

The resolution also authorized French soldiers for a temporary period “to take all necessary measures”to support MISCA troops, primarily from Cameroon, Gabon and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Following the vote, French President Francois Hollande said the 600 French troops already in the Central African Republic on Thursday would be doubled “within a few days, even a few hours.”

The intervention was launched with the aim of ending the sectarian strife which has ravaged the landlocked and mineral rich country of 4.6 million since an alliance of mainly Muslim militias known as Seleka launched a coup in March.

In September current President Michel Djotodia announced that Seleka had been dissolved.

The disbanded group has since dispersed into the countryside, where they have unleashed a campaign of gross human rights violations including rape, murder and looting in the Christian majority country, according to Human Rights Watch.

France’s UN Ambassador Gerard Araud told the Council after the vote that “people have been terrorized by militia carrying out atrocities.”

“On the security front, the country risks collapsing into chaos, with uncontrollable and unforeseen consequences for the whole region,”
 he warned. “On the human front, the risk of mass atrocities is there.”

“History demands us to avoid the worst,” he said.

Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor of Pan-African News Wire, told RT that France is not compelled by humanitarian interests, but rather interested in “pursuing their own economic, political and strategic interests.”

Azikiwe says the opposition requested the assistance of French forces, as the alliance of militias known as the current government commands marginal support in the country. He says that since only 20 percent of the country is Muslim, the opposition is “utilizing the fact politically that Seleka is a Muslim dominated coalition” although they are “by no means Islamic-oriented in terms of their political outlook.”
Writing for the Guardian, Simon Tisdall notes the religious component of France’s foreign policy, arguing that the current French interventionist doctrine “is about stemming the tide of Islamist extremism and sectarianism that threatens swaths of territory from the Horn of Africa to the Sahel and Maghreb – and potentially, the soft European underbelly of which France forms a vulnerable part.”
Tisdall says that “France’s happy interventionists” have a primarily “humanitarian focus,” although such expeditions have also “served to bolster fading French international prestige, especially in its former African colonies, and to boost [President Francois] Hollande's low approval ratings.”

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