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Central Africans Cast Votes for Leader

Feb 15, 2016

Two recent articles in the Fort Wayne, Ind., News Sentinel, provide an update on elections in the Central African Republic, where a large number of Grace Brethren congregations are located. A portion of the articles appear below. Links are provided to the complete story online. 

Central African Republic voters seek leader to end chaos

February 14, 2016

BANGUI, Central African Republic (AP) — Voters in Central African Republic are returning to the polls to cast ballots in a historic presidential runoff vote.

The long awaited election is being held after more than two years of sectarian fighting between Muslim and Christian communities left thousands dead and nearly 1 million people displaced.

Click here to read the complete article.

February 12, 2016
Presidential candidates Faustin Archange Touadera, right, and Anicet Georges Dologuele, left, participate in a televised debate in Bangui, Central African Republic, Friday Feb. 12, 2016. (AP photo)

BANGUI, Central African Republic (AP) — For more than two years, even going to the cemetery to bury a loved one could get a mourner killed in Central African Republic. The threat of attacks from Christian militia fighters was once so high that Muslims here began burying their dead at home.

Now the capital’s largest Muslim cemetery has reopened just ahead of the country’s landmark presidential runoff vote Sunday with imams, the archbishop and ambassadors all gathering together to watch as the reddish earth was broken to once again receive the dead with palm fronds.

It’s one tangible sign that intercommunal relations here are improving after the cycles of violence that have left nearly 1 million people displaced and an untold thousands dead. Central African Republic’s future remains highly precarious and yet the barricade that once blocked Bangui’s remaining Muslims from leaving their enclave no longer exists. Muslims who only several months earlier were afraid to walk on the streets, even in their own PK5 neighborhood, are now praying in public.

Many credit the November visit of Pope Francis, who met with Christian leaders and ventured in his open-air vehicle to the mosque where many have sought refuge since tensions exploded in late 2013. Whether these advances hold largely depends on the success of Sunday’s historic vote that pits two Christians — both former prime ministers — against each other after a crowded first round of balloting. The two went head to head Friday night in a debate filmed at the headquarters of national television.

“We want these elections to take place as quickly as possible — we have waited long enough,” says Polycarpe Bebongo-Congo, 40, who is supporting Faustin Archange Touadera, the second-place finisher in the first round.

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