Battle of Bangui

Battle of Bangui took part during 2012 civil war in Central African Republic and resulted in Séléka taking power in Central African Republic. With Central African Republic army and international soldiers absent, most of resistance was raised by South African soldiers.[1][2]

Battle of Bangui
Part of Central African Republic Civil War
Date23–24 March 2013
Location
Result

- Decisive Séléka victory over FACA and FOMAC troops
- South African forces successfully repel Séléka advance.

- Séléka raised the white flag and forced to negotiate truce.
Belligerents
 Central African Republic
 South Africa
Séléka
Commanders and leaders
François Bozizé
Col. William Dixon
Michel Djotodia
Units involved
5 Special Forces Regiment
1 Parachute Battalion
7 Medical Battalion Group
CPJP
UFDR
Strength
200 soldiers 5,000 – 7,000 soldiers
Casualties and losses
13 dead and 27 wounded 500-800 killed, 1000s wounded

Background

On 18 March 2013, the rebels, having taken over Gambo and Bangassou, threatened to take up arms again if their demands for the release of political prisoners, the integration of their forces into the national army and for South African soldiers to leave the country were not met within 72 hours.[3] Three days later, they took control of the towns of Damara and Bossangoa.[4]

Battle

At 23 March Séléka rebels entered Bangui's outskirts. On 7 pm Christian Narkoyo, spokesman of Séléka announced that rebel forces crossed PK12 neighborhood with little resistance. Rebels cut electricity from city by turning off Bouali power plant. In reaction to rebel advancement French forces secured Bangui airport. On 8:15 am 24 March fightings erupted in center of city. On 8:48 Djouma Narkoyo announced that rebels have captured presidential palace reporting that president Bozizé have fled before. Soldiers from Multinational Force of Central Africa were deployed to protect foreign embassies and French soldiers participated in securing the city to avoid looting. By 12:00 it was announced that rebels control entire city with only some pockets of resistance remaining. On 18:31 Michel Djotodia declared himself new president of the country[5][6]

gollark: It has been done.
gollark: If you know of a serialization library which *does* and which emits compact output, please tell me.
gollark: I'm just using a boring old JSON library, okay? I don't see why I'd want to serialize that to tapes.
gollark: It has four functions: `write(tape_drive, data, ignore_out_of_space)`, `write_string(tape_drive, string, ignore_out_of_space)`, `read(tape_drive)`, `read_string(tape_drive)`.
gollark: https://pastebin.com/eR4RfSiTIntroducing my simple library for using tapes to store data.

References

  1. Heitman, Helmoed Römer. "How deadly CAR battle unfolded". Independent Online. Sunday Independent. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  2. Heitman, Helmoed (2013). The Battle in Bangui: The untold inside story (PDF). South Africa: Parktown Publishers. pp. 25–35. ISBN 978-0-9921902-8-6. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  3. Hippolyte Marboua and Krista Larson, "Central African Republic rebels threaten new fight" Archived 17 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine, Associated Press, 18 March 2013.
  4. "Central African Republic rebels reach outskirts of capital". Reuters. 22 March 2013. Archived from the original on 16 April 2013.
  5. "RCA: revivez la journée du samedi 23 mars" (in French). 23 March 2013.
  6. "Centrafrique: revivez la journée du dimanche 24 mars" (in French). 24 March 2013.
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