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Fighters in CAR Trading Illicit Diamonds And Ivory For Arms, Says Report

May 05, 14 by Albert Robinson

(IDEX Online News) – Combatants in the Central African Republic are trading illicit diamonds and ivory for arms, fuel and poaching equipment that help fuel the country’s conflict, according to rights group the Enough Project.

 

Diamonds mined in the country are sold to traders in neighboring Sudan, Chad, Cameroon and the Democratic Republic of Congo, researcher Kasper Agger told Bloomberg News.

 

His conclusions are contained in a report, Behind the Headlines: Drivers of Violence in the Central African Republic, based on interviews with fighters and their leaders and on satellite images, he said.

 

The Central African Republic has been gripped by violence since mainly Muslim members of the disbanded Seleka militia seized power in March 2013, installing President Michel Djotodia. He stepped down this January as part of an effort to restore stability.

 

Abuses prompted the creation of Christian anti-balaka gangs, which have added to the bloodshed. Thousands of people have been killed and more than 600,000 driven from their homes, according to the United Nations, according to the Bloomberg report.

 

Ways of stopping the violence include a deployment of experienced mediators to push peace talks and investigations by the International Criminal Court and other bodies, the rights group said.

 

The African Union and UN should also lead negotiations between the governments of Central African Republic and Chad for an agreement on exploration of oil fields that straddle their borders, the group said.

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