- Fresh deadly clashes hit several areas of the Central African Republic this week, sources told AFP today, as international alarm grows over spreading violence in the deeply troubled country.
"More than a dozen people" were killed in an assault in the southeastern town of Zemio, Jean-Alain Zembi, a priest, told AFP.
Janjaweed militia and armed Fulani tribesmen attacked police and a hospital and set fire to houses, also stealing people's possessions, he said.
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Another priest in Zemio, Desire Blaise Kpangou, on Friday wrote on Facebook that the attackers "wore turbans, had braided hair and spoke neither Sango or French".
There were also clashes on Tuesday and Wednesday in Bria, a central town, a hospital official told AFP, referring to "dead and wounded among civilians".
A MINUSCA spokesman confirmed there had been clashes and that the force had intervened in what remains a tense situation.
Aid groups on Tuesday urged the United Nations to take "immediate action" in the Central African Republic, saying the conflict-wracked nation is "teetering on the brink of catastrophe".
In a letter addressed to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, six humanitarian organisations expressed their "grave concern about the rapid deterioration of the security situation" in the country.
We "request your office take immediate action to prevent the country collapsing into another full-blown conflict", the letter said, adding that "at least 821 civilians have been killed since the start of the year.
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