Google – AFP, 27 February 2014
![]() |
Self-styled
political leader of a militia in the Central African Republic, Patrice
Edouard
Ngaissona speaks during an interview in Bangui on February 26, 2014
(AFP/File,
Issouf Sanogo)
|
Brazzaville
— The self-styled political leader of a militia sowing terror in the Central
African Republic has been arrested in north Congo and transferred to
Brazzaville, police in the country said Thursday.
A former
minister under ousted president Francois Bozize, Patrice Edouard Ngaissona --
who calls himself the coordinator of the mostly Christian
"anti-balaka" (anti-machete) militia, was arrested Tuesday along with
two aides.
"Mr
Ngaissona's arrest took place without violence," said a police official
speaking on condition of anonymity. "He virtually handed himself in. He is
currently in a safe place in the capital."
Congo's
pro-government newspaper Les Depeches de Brazzaville splashed a front-page
photograph of Ngaissona across its Thursday edition along with news of the
arrest.
Congo's
northern Likouala region, which lies across the Ubangi river from the CAR, has
since end 2013 hosted about 11,000 Christian and Muslim refugees, among the
million civilians displaced by the violence engulfing their homeland, according
to UN figures.
Ngaissona
served as a lawmaker and headed the Central African football federation before
becoming sports minister under Bozize, whose ouster in a Muslim-led coup in
March last year touched off a year of escalating inter-religious unrest.
Ngaissona
went on to declare himself leader of the anti-balaka militia, set up in
response to atrocities by the Muslim-led Seleka rebellion behind the coup.
The anti-balaka
currently pose the biggest threat to security in the strife-torn country, where
French and African peacekeepers are struggling to restore order and protect
civilians.
Congo is
deeply involved in the Central African crisis, with 1,000 troops deployed
there, the largest contingent in the 6,000-strong African force MISCA, and
President Denis Sassou Nguesso playing an important role as mediator.
Interim
president Catherine Samba Panza made her first foreign trip to Brazzaville
after taking over from Michel Djotodia, the Muslim president installed in last
year's coup and forced out in January.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.