The latest attack appeared to be retaliation for a mob attack on PK-5 on Thursday in which four people were killed.
Armed men in the capital of Central African Republic
slit a person's throat and set fire to scores of homes, in a cycle of
violence that could further delay elections and prevent a visit this
month by Pope Francis.
Witnesses said hundreds of people fled their homes in Bangui on Monday after the weekend's attack by men from the mainly Muslim PK-5 neighbourhood in which more than a dozen people were also shot and wounded.
It
was not immediately clear who the targets and attackers were, but the
violence is part of a pattern in which at least 90 people have been
killed since late September - after a Muslim man was found murdered.
The majority Christian country plunged into tumult when mostly Muslim Seleka
rebels seized power in a coup in 2013, prompting lethal reprisals by
Christian militias known as anti-balaka, and repeated bouts of
bloodletting since then.
The latest attack appeared to be retaliation for a mob attack on PK-5 on Thursday in which four people were killed.
The
pope is due to visit Bangui on Nov. 28-29 and go to a mosque in one of
the most dangerous neighbourhoods, but he hinted in an address on Sunday
that the violence might lead him to cancel the trip.
Families in the Fatima
district grabbed bedding and a few possessions and headed to camps for
displaced people or to stay with families in the city's south, where
priests had mobilised to welcome them, witnesses said.
"There is no disarmament in Central Africa. That is why the war still goes on," said Eugene Gazalima, a farmer and resident of the Fatima district. "If we had the disarmament, this war could not go on like that."
U.N.
peacekeepers have been stationed in PK-5 since last year. Tens of
thousands of Muslims were driven from their homes in the capital last
year by anti-balaka groups.
Authorities delayed
presidential and parliamentary elections, in part because of the unrest,
to Dec. 13, and they may be pushed back yet further if the spike in
violence persists.
A peace deal signed in May
between 10 armed groups required them to disarm and possibly be charged
with war crimes during the two-year conflict, but the brief optimism
from the accord seems to have run out.
Nearly
400,000 people have fled to camps during the conflict, and an additional
440,000 have sought refuge in neighbouring countries, according to an
October report from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs.
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Violence hits Central African Republic ahead of