Kidnapped Cleric and French aid worker released - BREAKING NEWS
By Michael Ireland, Senior Reporter, ASSIST News Service
(ANS- CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC, Jan. 23, 2015) -- Two aid workers kidnapped at gunpoint on Jan. 19 in Central African Republic, Claudia Priest and Rev. Gustave, were released on Jan 23, according to a report by World Watch Monitor.
(ANS- CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC, Jan. 23, 2015) -- Two aid workers kidnapped at gunpoint on Jan. 19 in Central African Republic, Claudia Priest and Rev. Gustave, were released on Jan 23, according to a report by World Watch Monitor.
World Watch Monitor reports that
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius thanked those involved in the
negotiations, "especially the archbishop of the country's capital for
their help," according to ABC.
Priest, 67, is a French national who arrived in Bangui, the capital, on Jan. 6, and Gustave, is a member of the congregation of Holy Spirit who works at CODIS, a diocesan service that is active in health care and education in Central African Republic.
Priest, 67, is a French national who arrived in Bangui, the capital, on Jan. 6, and Gustave, is a member of the congregation of Holy Spirit who works at CODIS, a diocesan service that is active in health care and education in Central African Republic.
Priest runs a small charity
organization, and has been travelling to CAR on a regular basis since
2005. She was preparing to return to France on Jan. 20.
World Watch Monitor says the
kidnapping took place Jan. 19 at about 8 a.m. near a Protestant church
in the 4th arrondissement, or district, of Bangui.
According to local sources who
spoke to World Watch Monitor, Priest and Gustave were in a car loaded
with medicine along with another member of the congregation of the Holy
Spirit, a man identified as Elkana. They were returning from a trip to
Damara, 70 kilometres north of Bangui. As they arrived at the entrance
of the church, they were intercepted by four men, armed with guns and
who ordered the three to get out of the vehicle. Their phones, money and
other personal belongings were confiscated.
The car’s driver, Elkana, managed to flee while Gustave and Priest were taken hostage.
The two were taken to the Boy
Rab area, known as the stronghold of anti-Balaka militias in Bangui.
Their vehicle and all loaded inside were taken away.
World Watch Monitor says the
kidnappers demanded the release of one of their leaders, Rodrigue
Ngaïbona, known as "General Andjilo," who was arrested on Jan. 18 by
United Nations peacekeeping forces, in exchange for the release of the
two hostages.
Ngaibona is accused of being responsible for the massacre of civilians, notably during the failed offensive led by anti-balaka militias in Bangui, in December 2013.
Ngaibona is accused of being responsible for the massacre of civilians, notably during the failed offensive led by anti-balaka militias in Bangui, in December 2013.
World Watch Monitor explained
that negotiations aimed at obtaining the release of the two hostages and
the return of their vehicle and its contents were led by the Archbishop
of Bangui, Dieudonné Nzapalainga, and Rev. Nicolas Guérékoyamé Gbangou,
the President of Evangelical Alliance in CAR. The two top clerics are
members of the Muslims and Christians Platform in CAR.
The French government called it ''an act contrary to humanitarian law.’’
World Watch Monitor further
stated the abduction of foreign nationals by armed groups is recurrent
in this war-torn central Africa country. Also on Jan. 20, a humanitarian
aid worker on the UN staff was kidnapped by a group of armed men in
Bangui. She was abducted while driving to work, but was released a few
hours later.
In October, a Polish priest was
abducted by eight members of a rebel group called the Democratic Front
of the Central African People, in the extreme west of the country, near
the Cameroon border. Rev. Mateusz Dziedzic, of the diocese of Tarnow, in
Baboua, was released weeks later in exchange for a Democratic Front
leader, Abdoulaye Miskine, who had been imprisoned in Cameroon.
Who are the anti-balaka?
The Central African Republic has
been wracked by violence since December 2012, when a coalition of
Muslim-dominated rebel groups under the Séléka banner moved through the
country to eventually drive out President Francois Bozizé in March 2013.
What followed was 10 months of Séléka violence, much of it directed at
Christians, thousands of whom were killed and driven from their homes.
Séléka leader Michel Djotodia
took control of a transitional government, but lost control of Séléka
soldiers. In December 2013, the UN Security Council authorised the
expansion of the African and French military forces then attempting to
maintain security in the CAR, and started planning for the possible
conversion of those forces to a UN-managed peacekeeping operation. By
January 2014, a new president had replaced Djotodia, the Séléka
coalition had been disbanded, and was being pursued by violent vigilante
groups known as the anti-Balaka.
Since December 2013, the
anti-Balaka have waged a revenge campaign of ethnic cleansing in the
west of CAR, as Séléka remnants have retreated to the northeast. Many
hundreds of Muslims, as well as non-Muslims, have been killed, and tens
of thousands have fled.
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