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Alleged CAR rebel leader to face war crimes trial

By AFP
Africa A rebel coalition called the Seleka, drawn largely from the Muslim minority, ousted CAR president Francois Bozize in 2013.  By SIA KAMBOU (AFP)
THU, 09 DEC 2021 LISTEN
A rebel coalition called the Seleka, drawn largely from the Muslim minority, ousted CAR president Francois Bozize in 2013. By SIA KAMBOU (AFP)

An alleged leader of a rebel group in the Central African Republic will go on trial to face charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity, the International Criminal Court (ICC) said on Thursday.

The Hague-based court, which has been considering a slew of accusations against alleged Seleka leader Mahamat Said Abdel Kani, 51, said in a statement it "partially confirms the charges and commits the suspect to trial".

One of the poorest countries in the world, the CAR spiralled into conflict in 2013 when president Francois Bozize was ousted by a rebel coalition called the Seleka, drawn largely from the Muslim minority.

The coup triggered a sectarian bloodbath between the Seleka and "anti-Balaka" forces, who were mainly Christian or animist.

The ICC said the court retained charges against Said that were committed in the capital Bangui between April and August 2013 against detained people suspected to be Bozize supporters.

The crimes included torture, imprisonment and cruel treatment.

"The chamber found that there is sufficient evidence to establish substantial grounds to believe that Mr Said was a senior member of the Seleka coalition and is criminally responsible" for those acts, the statement said.

The court rejected similar accusations against him over alleged crimes committed in a different location in Bangui between September and November 2013.

The CAR authorities handed Said to the ICC in January in response to an international arrest warrant.

Two former anti-Balaka leaders, Patrice-Edouard Ngaissona and Alfred Yekatom, are on trial at the ICC.

France, the former colonial power in the CAR, intervened militarily to stem the 2013 conflict, deploying some 2,000 troops under a UN mandate who were eventually withdrawn in 2016.

The United Nations deployed its own peacekeeping mission the following year, which remains.

Central African Republic.  By  (AFP) Central African Republic. By (AFP)

After a transition period, Faustin-Archange Touadera was elected president in February 2016, and was returned to office in a ballot in 2020.

But the country remains chronically unstable and swathes of it remain in the hands of rebel groups.

The 2020 presidential ballot was overshadowed by an attempt by a rebel alliance to advance on Bangui and by very low turnout as voters in rebel-held areas were unable to cast their ballot.

Thousands have lost their lives in the conflict.

Nearly 650,000 have fled their homes and another 575,000 have left the country, mainly heading to Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo and Chad, according to UN figures as of December 2018.

A long-planned CAR special court, tasked with trying crimes committed in the country since 2003, held its inaugural session in October 2018.

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