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East/Subsaharan Africa
Leaders of Former CAR Ruling Party Arrested
2003-06-09
Eight executive board members of the former ruling party in the Central African Republic (CAR) were arrested on Sunday as they held a meeting in the capital, Bangui, Communication Minister Parfait Mbaye told IRIN.
When somebody named Parfait speaks, I always believe him...
He said the Mouvement de Liberation du Peuple Centrafricain (MLPC) leaders had been organising "subversive meetings" to destabilise the new administration in Bangui.
Former army chief of staff Francois Bozize ousted the MLPC-led government of Ange-Felix Patasse on 15 March.
And about damn' time it was...
Those arrested included the former minister of state for communication and MLPC second deputy chairman, Gabriel Jean Edouard Koyambounou, the former MLPC secretary-general and Patasse's special adviser, Joseph Vermont Tchendo, and the former minister of education, Andre Ringui. Since the coup, all three men had been hiding in the Nigerian, Chadian and Japanese embassies, respectively. Former Prime Minister Martin Ziguele is still hiding in the French embassy, together with several other former ministers.
"Don't let them get us!"
"These people go out of embassies and organize subversive meetings to destabilise the regime," Mbaye said. He added that all the eight MLPC leaders were held in a Bangui police station.
We assume they're waiting for a shipment of blindfolds and cigarettes to arrive...

A local daily newspaper, "L'Hirondelle", reported on 23 May that mercenaries linked to Patasse had launched a rebellion in the country's eastern provinces, allegedly with political support from MLPC leaders in Bangui.
Here we go again...
In March, Patasse, who is in exile in Togo, announced that he would form a movement, the Front de Liberation du Peuple Centrafricain, with the aim of removing Bozize from power.
And reinstalling himself...
The Sunday arrests of the MLPC officials were the first, by Bozize's administration, since the coup. The MLPC, which is represented in the transitional government and council, has complained on several occasions of harassment by the new administration. In April, Bangui's state prosecutor froze the bank accounts for 26 former ministers.
I can see why they'd regard that as harrassment. But maybe they wanted the national treasury back?
Posted by:Fred Pruitt

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