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'Score-settling' in C African Republic kills 13

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AP Bangui
Scattered violence in the capital of Central African Republic, including two consecutive nights of intense gunfire in some neighbourhoods, has killed 13 people since Michel Djotodia announced his resignation from the presidency on Friday, the local Red Cross said today.

The victims were mostly targeted in isolated incidents of "score-settling" and the number was likely to rise as violence continued in pockets of Bangui, Antoine Mbao-Bogo, the local Red Cross president, said.

"Among the dead we've found night watchmen, street children and the victims of stray bullets," Mbao-Bogo said.

Many streets in Bangui were deserted Sunday with residents of some neighbourhoods holed up fearing further violence.
 

Backed by his mostly Muslim Seleka rebel alliance, Djotodia seized power in March. On Friday, he agreed to step aside along with his prime minister at a regional summit in Chad amid mounting pressure over his failure to stem widespread violence pitting Muslims and Christians against each other.

The violence reached new heights in December, killing more than 1,000 people and prompting nearly 1 million to flee their homes. Seleka attacks on Christian civilians led to retaliatory attacks by Christian militias against Muslim civilians and mosques.

Religious violence continued this weekend amid uncertainty over who will rule the chronically unstable country and lay the groundwork for new elections. A national transitional council led by Alexandre Ferdinand Nguendet has two weeks to choose another interim president to replace Djotodia.

In Bangui's Boulata neighbourhood, Muslim youths claiming to seek revenge for Djotodia's exit set fire to a church, said Eric Dibelet, the pastor at a neighbouring church. Children in the Sica-Saidou neighbourhood stole items from a mosque before setting it alight, saying they were avenging the killing of a Christian the night before, said witness Didier Serge Ngoalessio. He said soldiers from the African Union peacekeeping force intervened to interrupt the attack.

And in Galabadja, a distraught former member of Seleka opened fire seemingly at random yesterday, killing and injuring an untold number of bystanders, said witness Sylvain Namboa.

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First Published: Jan 12 2014 | 10:25 PM IST

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