Thursday, December 12, 2013

Soldiers killed in CAR ‘died for France’, Hollande says

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© Screen grab
Video by Julia SIEGER
Text by FRANCE 24
Latest update : 2013-12-11

The French president arrived in the Central African Republic on Tuesday amid a French-led mission in the restive country and immediately praised the two French soldiers slain overnight who he said, “gave their lives to save the lives of others.”

French President François Hollande arrived in the Central African Republic on Tuesday evening aftertwo French soldiers were slain in the conflict-torn nation.
Paris is leading a military operation in the CAR in a bid to stem the inter-religious violence in the troubled former French colony.
“Antoine and Nicolas died for France on a worthwhile mission. They gave their lives to save the lives of others”, the French president said on his arrival of paratroopers Nicolas Vokaer, 23, and Antoine Le Quinio, 22, who were killed overnight during an operation to disarm rebels in the capital Bangui.
“This is obviously an emotional moment,” he added. “Two soldiers have died serving on an ongoing mission that other soldiers are engaged in, right at this moment and right where I am, to pacify this city and this country.”
France to stay the course
Hollande, who had flown from South Africa where he was attending a memorial service for Nelson Mandela, said the deaths of the two paratroopers would not alter the course of France’s military mission to CAR.
“We knew it was going to be a dangerous mission,” he said. “But it is necessary to prevent further carnage.”

Bangui was under curfew on Tuesday evening, while French fighter jets patrolled overhead.
Hollande, accompanied by his Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, is also due to hold talks with interim President Michel Djotodia while in the country, whose Seleka movement captured Bangui and ousted president François Bozizé in March.
The Seleka rebels mostly come from CAR’s Muslim minority and while Djotodia officially disbanded the Seleka alliance, in reality, the former rebel leader lost control of his rebel fighters.
Terrorised population
They then began terrorising the population and government forces proved powerless to stop the bloodshed that followed. Meanwhile, Christian vigilante groups known as the “anti-balaka” sprang up to defend their communities but some have also committed revenge attacks on Muslim communities.
France deployed troops to the CAR on December 5 following a green-light from the United Nations.
They arrived in the wake of days of horrendous violence in Bangui in which nearly 400 people were killed.

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