BANGUI (Reuters) – Ugandan troops in Central African Republic (CAR) have killed at least 15 fighters from the mainly Muslim Seleka force, a group that has carved out fiefdoms in the country since leaving power earlier this year, local sources said yesterday.
Ugandan troops, backed by US Special Forces, have been in CAR hunting down Ugandan Lords Resistance Army rebels, who have made the lawless nation one of their rear bases during a decade of preying on populations across the central African region.
However, the Ugandan troops clashed with fighters from the former Seleka rebel group in the remote east on Sunday and yesterday, highlighting how the zone is awash with different armed groups. It was not immediately clear if US troops were supporting Ugandan soldiers involved in the fighting.
“The Ugandans fired on our men by mistake after confusing them with the LRA,” Eric Massi, a senior Seleka official in Bangui, told Reuters.
“There were 15 dead and three injured on our side. There were three dead and three injured on the Ugandan side,” he added. “We are trying to calm things down.”
Bienfait Walibanga, a priest in the Saint Joseph parish in Zako, in CAR’s remote east close to the border with Democratic Republic of Congo, confirmed clashes between the two sides there and at the nearby village of Kono on Sunday and yesterday.
He said a Ugandan soldier had been killed in an attack by Seleka fighters on Sunday, provoking a retaliation that killed two Seleka fighters.
Ugandan troops then killed 14 more Seleka fighters in further clashes yesterday, he said.