Three Killed in CAR Capital Following Church Attack

W460

Three people were killed in the capital of the Central African Republic Friday in violence coming just days after a deadly church attack in which 27 people were kidnapped.

The victims were thought to have been killed after peacekeepers opened fire on thousands of anti-government protesters.

The deeply impoverished, majority Christian country has been wracked by relentless tit-for-tat attacks between Christian vigilante groups and the mainly Muslim ex-Seleka rebels who seized control in a coup last year, but were forced from power in January.

Burundian troops belonging to the African Union's MISCA peacekeeping force fired on "armed demonstrators" they said tried to "force their way into their base", Colonel Bengone Otsaga, head of MISCA's police force, told AFP.

Two were shot dead and several others injured, some seriously, in the clashes near the center of the capital Bangui, the Red Cross said.

The third fatality was brought to a hospital operated by aid group Doctors Without Borders, along with five people who were injured in the violence.

Thousands of people gathered across Bangui on Friday calling for the interim government to be removed, and accusing international forces of failing to prevent Wednesday's church attack.

The United Nations has increased the death toll from the assault on the Notre Dame de Fatima church, where some 9,000 displaced people had taken shelter, to 17.

Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba, spokeswoman for the U.N.'s refugee agency in Geneva, said the attack "resulted in the deaths of at least 17 displaced people and 27 civilians reportedly abducted by assailants who drove them to an unknown location."

"We have no idea where they have taken them," she said.

Among those killed was the priest at the church, according to police sources and the charity.

"The attackers, who arrived on pick-up trucks in the early afternoon, threw grenades into the church ground before opening fire on people, using small arms. A priest was killed during the attack while two children and two adults succumbed to their injuries on Thursday," said Lejeune-Kaba.

"The church is now completely empty. Many fled without anything, no money, no food, not even a mat to sleep on. Others had bullet wounds that need to be attended to urgently," she said.

Members of the mostly Muslim Seleka rebels have been blamed for attacking the church, but Lejeune-Kaba said the authorities "really don't know" if they were involved.

The U.N. Security Council on Friday condemned "in the strongest terms" the spate of attacks, urging an immediate end to the bloodshed.

In a unanimous statement, the 15-member panel demanded that "all militias and armed groups and elements put aside their arms, cease all forms of violence and destabilizing activities immediately in order to end the cycle of violence and retaliation."

Interim Central African Republic president Catherine Samba Panza described the attack as a "terrorist act" and announced three days of national mourning.

She said such incidents were recurring because "those who repeatedly carry out crimes continue to circulate freely," and called on the international community to rapidly support the process of reforming her country's army, currently disarmed and held to barracks.

"We need the use of all our defense and security forces, including the Central African armed forces. The discussions are well advanced with the international community that is starting to understand our concerns on the subject," she said.

She also called on the protesters to pull down their barricades.

"You can't manage a country in the midst of disorder. I don't want the blood of the people of Central Africa to keep flowing," she said.

On Friday, bursts of automatic weapons fire were heard in the central Bangui neighborhood where the presidential palace is located, and around the airport on the city outskirts.

Violence in the capital has increased drastically since last weekend, according to the U.N. spokeswoman.

The French and African peacekeeping force said on Friday that it would "react with the greatest determination" to any threats against its soldiers or locals in Bangui.

A joint statement from the forces, released via Central African radio, said: "People of Bangui, do not oppose the movement of international forces. Do not build barricades, do not prevent its operations."

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has also strongly condemned the attacks, calling on the authorities to take "concrete measures to ensure that perpetrators are held accountable".

The International Committee of the Red Cross said it was "very worried" by the situation in Bangui, where the aid organization has teams trying to help the wounded.

"We must be allowed to evacuate sick and wounded people, and collect the bodies of the dead, in complete safety and without hindrance," Juerg Eglin, the head of the delegation in the country, said.

There are 425,000 internally displaced people across the country, and a further 121,000 refugees in neighboring countries.

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