Seleka Rebels Recruiting Troops for New National Army

{{The Seleka rebels who staged a successful coup in the Central African Republic last month are recruiting troops for a new national army, though nobody has the means to pay them.}}

“Attention! Twenty men come out of the ranks,” Corporal Valentin William Saba shouts at a group of about 100 men. Less than two weeks after taking power on March 24, the rebels are sifting out volunteers.

This week queues of several hundred people gathered outside a barracks in the capital Bangui. Youths from all ethnic groups are being selected by the Seleka coalition.

Officially, the authorities claim that they are grouping soldiers into barracks ahead of a demobilisation, disarmament and social reinsertion (DDR) programme.

“The idea is disarmament rather than recruitment,” says a source close to the government, while a diplomatic source pointed out that neither Seleka nor the state has the means to pay new troops.

However, the Seleka is trying not to discourage candidates, inviting supporters and opportunists alike to join its ranks, to mixed political and social ends.

Colonel Omar Bourdas, one of the top Seleka officers in charge of the general staff’s barracks, explains, “It is not about rebels to be demobilised, but new elements for a new army.

We know about politics. We are taking on young people to prevent them becoming bandits and thieves. They’re out of work. Street kids who could become bandits.

“But, unlike the regime of Francois Bozize (the president ousted by the rebels) we are taking in everybody, whatever his ethnic group or religion.”

About 300 people including many women are registered at Bourdas’s barracks, with around 1,000 more at Camp Beal.

“We are here because there’s no work. We’re unemployed and do shitty little jobs. We want to be in the army,” says a soldier at Camp Beal, where many new recruits are shaving their heads, hoping to have the “right look”.

“We suffered too much with Bozize. Now, it’s a new regime,” says Levis Aidouma Olamoko, 22, who drives a moto-taxi. “I didn’t join Seleka because I was in Bangui.”

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