People displaced by fighting pray at a church in Bangui, in the Central African Republic, yesterday. Photo: ReutersPeople displaced by fighting pray at a church in Bangui, in the Central African Republic, yesterday. Photo: Reuters

Residents of the Central African Republic gathered in churches to mourn yesterday after hundreds were killed in violence between Christian and Muslim communities, prompting France to intervene in its former colony.

Residents and aid workers described a period of relative calm yesterday after three days of fighting but said that sporadic gunfire continued overnight in some neighbourhoods.

Central African Republic has descended into chaos as interim President Michel Djotodia, who seized power in March, has struggled to control his loose band of Muslim fighters, who have attacked members of the Christian majority and prompted them to organise defence militias.

The country, rich in gold, diamonds and uranium, has seen little but conflict and political instability since independence from France in 1960.

The Red Cross has reported 394 dead since the latest wave of killings began on December 5 and said it was working to recover the remaining bodies yesterday. Residents of both faiths have huddled in churches for protection from the armed groups.

A Reuters reporter saw thousands of people at a Sunday morning service at St Paul’s church in the riverside capital of Bangui. Makeshift beds inside the church were removed temporarily to allow space for prayer benches, but still people spilled into the courtyard.

Country mourns after ‘religious’ killings

“We need today to promote inter-religious dialogue to transform the dynamic of vio-lence and war into a dynamic of peace and solidarity,” Dieudonne Nzapalainga, Archbishop of Bangui, said at the service.

The church is struggling to provide funerals for its congregation, said Bishop Nestor Aziagba, who assisted in yesterday’s service. “Men can’t leave their homes and women are taking the risk of taking the bodies and digging their own holes to bury them,” he told Reuters.

The morgue at Bangui’s Hopital Communautaire was full, another Reuters correspondent said. He saw bodies piled up in the morgue and in the hospital corridors.

President Djotodia announced three days of national mourning on state radio on Saturday.

France is deploying 1,600 troops to its former colony after the UN Security Council on Thursday authorised it to use force to help African peacekeepers struggling to restore order.

French helicopters flew low above Bangui while soldiers patrolled the streets in both the capital and in Bossangoa, about 300 kilometres north of Bangui.

Peter Bouckaert, Human Rights Watch emergency director, said on his Twitter feed yester-day that the first French helicopter had arrived in Bossangoa.

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