A fresh round of fighting has
broken out in the Central African Republic, where sectarian violence has
driven hundreds of thousands of people from their homes.
At least 37 people died in the
capital Bangui over just 24 hours, a security source told Al Jazeera
on Friday.
In one incident, peacekeepers tried
to disarm a group of former Seleka rebels, killing three of them. At least
one soldier from the peacekeeping force was also killed.
"No-one knows the precise
numbers of dead or injured, but the poorly equipped hospitals of this city
are overflowing," Al Jazeera's Andrew Simmons reported from
Bangui.
African peacekeeping forces and
French troops were trying to contain the violence, as aid agencies
struggled to provide the basics for survival for scores of displaced
people.
The latest outbreak of violence
came after days of relative calm in the Central African Republic, where
Christian and Muslim groups have for weeks been engaged in a bloody feud.
The fighting in the former French
colony is between the mainly Muslim Seleka fighters - originally from
neighbouring Chad and Sudan - and the Christian anti-Balaka, whose name
means "anti-machete," the weapon of choice for Seleka.
International concern
Despite international efforts to
contain the crisis, the divisions in the impoverished country remain
deep, threatening to tear it apart.
On Friday, a mob of young men
wearing crucifixes attacked a mosque, pounding holes into its cinderblock
walls and methodically stripping apart the corrugated iron roof and tossing
the pieces on the ground.
"We don't want mosques in our
country," shouted Clavert Bettare, with a machete strapped to his
back.
The night before, residents in the
Gobango neighbourhood said clashes between rival Muslim and Christian militias
spiralled into a firefight when Chadian troops from the African Union
peacekeeping force rolled up and began shooting at civilians.
A government statement on Friday
said the Chadian troops responded after being attacked by a grenade hurled
by Christian militias, whom they accused of kidnapping people and
terrorising the population.
Fears of mass atrocities and
possibly genocide has spurred an international response spearheaded by
1,600 French troops backed by African forces from Chad, Congo, Equatorial
Guinea, Burundi and Gabon.
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