Acting President Samba-Panza (3rd from left) with other officials; South Africa donates equipment for CAR elections |
Central African Republic
votes on Sunday in elections seen as a crucial step towards restoring
democratic rule and ending years of violence that have left the impoverished
nation split along religious faultlines.
Reuters
report continues:
Two
former prime ministers, Faustin-Archange Touadera and Anicet-Georges Dologuele,
are contesting the presidential run-off while authorities attempt to re-run a
first round of legislative polls which were cancelled over irregularities.
Central
African Republic, one of the world's most unstable countries, was plunged into
the worst crisis in its history in early 2013, when mainly Muslim Seleka
fighters toppled President Francois Bozize.
Christian
militias responded to Seleka abuses, attacking the Muslim minority community.
Thousands have died in the bloodshed, and one in five Central Africans has
fled, either internally or abroad.
"We
expect our new president to disarm the fighters so we can go home," said
Emilienne Namsona, 47, who fled in 2013 to the M'poko displacement camp, home
to some 23,000 internal refugees next to the airport in the capital Bangui.
"This
is important because we are suffering here in Central African Republic. We want
peace. We're going to vote for peace," she said.
A
turnout of nearly 80 percent for a first round of voting in December was
largely viewed as a popular rejection of the violence, which has left the
northeast under the control of Muslim rebels while Christian militias roam the
southwest.
Both
Dologuele, a banker, and trained mathematics professor Touadera have made the
restoration of peace and security the centrepiece of their presidential
campaigns. Both candidates are Christians.
Touadera
has portrayed himself as an anti-corruption stalwart, while Dologuele pledges
to revive the economy and draw in investors hesitant until now to exploit
significant gold, diamond and uranium deposits.
"This
election is taking place at a moment when the country is really at a crossroads
... This is an amazing opportunity to start fresh," said Parfait
Onanga-Anyanga, who heads MINUSCA, the country's 11,000-troop strong U.N.
peacekeeping mission.
However,
while the polls should re-establish democracy after three years of unpopular
interim administrations, observers warn against setting expectations too high.
Whoever
wins the presidency will face the daunting tasks of extending state authority
outside the capital, rebuilding the army, breathing life into a moribund
economy and restoring a semblance of security in across nation awash with guns.
"(Elections) are not
going to solve the deep, systemic problems that put this country into
conflict," said Lewis Mudge, Africa researcher for Human Rights Watch.
"It's cheaper to buy a grenade in Bangui than it is to buy a can of Coke.
That's how bad it is here."
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