Five stories from throughout the day (updated to reflect a newer version of the Reuters story on the source page):
(See also, most recently, last night's Reuters story.)
From IRIN...
The government of the Central African Republic (CAR) has called on the international community to help it restore peace and order in its northern town of Birao. The town was captured by a rebel coalition calling itself the Union des Forces Démocratiques pour le Rassemblement on Monday.
Cyriaque Gonda, spokesman for President Francois Bozize, said the appeal had been made to the security councils of the UN and the African Union (AU), the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa, the Central African States Economic Community, France and other friendly organisations and countries.
In a statement broadcast on national radio on Monday, Gonda said the government suspected that the attackers who captured Birao came from neighbouring Sudan. Birao is a town of at least 30,000 inhabitants near the border between the two countries.
"We are not accusing Sudan of attacking the CAR, but we are wondering why such an attack may have come from a neighbouring and friendly country," Gonda said.
The Sudanese ambassador in the CAR capital, Bangui, could not be reached for comment on the allegation.
Birao lies on the major trade routes to Chad and Sudan. It is vital to the region’s commerce and is essential for the delivery of social services. Accessing the town from Bangui is only possible by air after the road network in the north was damaged after of several years of civil war.
Gonda appealed to the UN to implement the Security Council's Resolution 1706 on the deployment of UN troops to the border between CAR and Sudan to restore security.
The rebel group - believed to comprise three factions opposed to Bozize's leadership - attacked government soldiers stationed at Birao and captured the town.
"Many people, including soldiers and civilians, died as the result of the attack," Gonda said.
He added that serious damage to property also occurred during Monday's attack.
However, in a telephone interview on Tuesday, the spokesman of the rebel coalition, Abakar Saboune, said the group had no connection to Sudan. It is thought the coalition is mostly made up of former mercenaries and fighters who supported Bozize during his 2002-2003 rebellion, which led to him taking power in March 2003 from President Ange-Felix Patasse.
"We are operating from our territory and we have been controlling the northeast end since we arrived in Tiringulu in April this year," Saboune said.
Tiringilu is a small town in the Vakaga Prefecture, close to Birao.
"We are in full control of the town of Birao and its surroundings," he said. "We only attacked loyal troops and I can swear that no civilian died in the attack."
Two rebels died and two others were wounded during the fighting for control of Birao, he said. Saboune claimed they killed 13 government soldiers, captured 10, and that 14 others had joined the coalition. Those who fled into the bush have asked to join the rebels, he said.
He added that the coalition would remain in Birao while planning to advance on the capital, Bangui.
The government's accusation against Sudan complicates further the relations between the two countries. The CAR closed its border with Sudan in April after Chadian rebels coming from Sudan crossed its border to attack N'djamena, the Chadian capital. The CAR rebels allegedly helped their Chadian counterparts to attack N'djamena, hoping to get weapons in return for their support.
The latest attack on Birao occurred while Bozize and his prime minister were out of the country. Military officials said reinforcements had been sent to Birao.
Gonda claimed the armed attackers came from Sudan's Darfur region. A lieutenant in the CAR army, who declined to be named, said the attackers, numbering at least 300 men, were militarily well-equipped.
There are several armed groups operating near Birao. In April, aeroplanes, as yet still unidentified, landed in the Tiringulu to offload military equipment and personnel. Military officials in Bangui acknowledged that the armed men dropped into the region were still operating there.
In June, a rebel attack on an army position in Gordil, an area near Birao, left 13 soldiers dead.
The capture of Birao is a clear sign that rebel activity has reemerged in the country since Bozize took power. The town has an airport could be used to supply the rebels.
From the AP...
A spokesman for shadowy rebels in Central African Republic denied his fighters have bases in Sudan and vowed to oust the president of this volatile nation in the heart of Africa.
Government spokesman Cyriaque Gonda said Monday that armed fighters based in Sudan's troubled Darfur region crossed into Central African Republic a day earlier and attacked the northern town of Birao in fighting that killed both civilians and army troops.
Contacted by telephone from Birao, rebel spokesman Abakar Saboune confirmed his fighters assaulted the town and claimed they now control it.
It was not possible, however, to independently confirm the claim, though an army lieutenant citing a government security report has also said rebels seized the town.
"We are in full control of the town of Birao and its surroundings," Saboune said, adding that rebels planned to use Birao as a base to push toward the capital, Bangui, about 800 kilometers (500 miles) to the southwest.
Saboune said his fighters were not operating in Sudan and were not receiving help from any groups or the government there.
Gonda told The Associated Press his government was "not accusing Sudan of attacking the CAR, but we wonder why rebels groups may so easily come from a neighboring and friendly country like Sudan."
Following an attack by Chadian rebels on Chad's capital in April, Bangui briefly closed its border with Sudan amid reports that Chadian rebels had used Central African Republic territory to carry the attacks.
Central African Republic has suffered decades of army revolts, coups and rebellions since the nation gained independence from France in 1960.
Little is known about the rebels. Unidentified armed groups have launched sporadic attacks on military installations in remote regions of the Central African Republic over the past year, displacing tens of thousands of refugees.
Saboune said his fighters had been in Central African Republic since April, when they entered from a neighboring country he declined to name. Central African Republic has borders with Sudan, Chad, [DR] Congo, Republic of Congo and Cameroon.
Saboune was once a well-known army captain who served with rebels led by President Francois Bozize, who swept to power in a bush war that culminated with a rebel assault on Bangui in 2003.
Bozize's forces ousted former President Ange-Felix Patasse, and Bozize later held elections and won the presidency in May 2005.
Saboune said rebels took up arms because Bozize's government was allegedly no better than that of Patasse.
"When we were fighting alongside Francois Bozize, we were expecting him to bring true change to the Central African Republic. But nepotism, corruption, mismanagement of public funds ... are still there," Saboune said. "We cannot accept it anymore."
Saboune also alleged top government jobs had gone to members of Bozize's Baya ethnic group, which makes up about 40 percent of the country's 3.6 million people and dozens of ethnic groups.
"We were the ones who brought Bozize to power," Saboune said. "Since he is misbehaving, we decided to go to the bush and form another rebellion to come and overthrow him."
Saboune claimed 13 government soldiers died in Sunday's fighting, along with two rebels. The government has given no casualty figures, and Gonda said only that some civilians and government forces had been killed.
Some 14 soldiers at the Birao military barracks helped the rebels organize the attack and defected to the rebel side, Saboune said, adding that 10 other government troops were captured. The government has not commented on the claim.
From the BBC...
Rebels claim to have captured a town in the far north-east of the Central African Republic (CAR).
A force of around 150 rebels took the town of Birao, which is close to the border with Sudan and Chad.
The rebels from the UFR movement say some government troops joined them, and others were taken prisoner.
In April this year an Antonov plane, carrying rebels, landed in the same location. The CAR government accused Sudan of being behind that attack.
Observers say the town, which is in a remote and swampy location, has been used by rebels as a base to attack the government.
"We took control of Birao early this [Monday] morning at 4:00 am [0300 GMT]. There was brief fighting," Abakar Sabone, who called himself a UFR captain, told the AFP news agency by telephone. [see below]
Security in the north has deteriorated in the past year, due to an increase in robberies and the emergence of rebels seeking to overthrow President Francois Bozize.
The town is also close to Chad and Darfur which have witnessed violence and insecurity in recent years.
From Reuters...
(An earlier version is also still available on AlertNet.)
Central African Republic on Friday asked France and regional African allies for military assistance to expel rebels who occupied a northeastern town after crossing from Sudan, the presidency said on Tuesday.
Officials in the landlocked former French colony, one of the poorest nations on earth, said the armed group on Monday stormed Birao, more than 800 km (500 miles) northeast of the capital Bangui, after advancing from Am Dafok on the Sudanese border.
The attack appeared to mark a spillover south into Central African Republic of the political and ethnic conflict which has raged in Sudan's western Darfur region since 2003. The same conflict has also pushed refugees and rebels into Chad.
President Francois Bozize's government protested to neighbour Sudan about the attack, demanding an explanation, and it also appealed to the international community for help.
A coalition of anti-Bozize rebels calling itself the UFDR, whose name in French means Union of Democratic Forces for Unity, claimed the capture of Birao, the largest town in the northeast.
A UFDR spokesman, Capt. Abakar Sabone, accused Bozize of "holding the country hostage" and demanded he start talks about power sharing.
The rebels said they would advance towards Bangui.
"We've asked France for military and logistical assistance," Bozize's spokesman Cyriaque Gonda told Reuters.
He said a similar request was also made to the six-nation Central African Economic and Monetary Community (CEMAC), to which the Central African Republic belongs. The other members are Chad, Cameroon, Congo Republic, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon.
France has a military contingent stationed in neighbouring Chad, including a squadron of Mirage jets, and early this year sent military helicopters to Central African Republic to back a border protection agreement with Sudan and Chad.
"Already heavily involved in stabilising the (President Idriss) Deby regime in Chad, France has a vested interest in stabilising Bozize's regime as a democratically elected Deby ally," Adrien Feniou, an analyst with Global Insight, wrote in a note on Tuesday about the Birao attack.
DARFUR LINK
In Paris, the French government expressed its support for Bozize's administration.
"These events demonstrate once again the importance of including the Central African Republic in any thinking about solving the crisis in Darfur," French Foreign Ministry spokesman Jean-Baptiste Mattei said.
Gonda said Central African Republic's Prime Minister Elie Dote had on Monday asked the U.N. Security Council in New York to deploy U.N. peacekeeping troops in the Chad-Central African Republic-Sudan border area to guarantee security.
Khartoum is refusing to accept the deployment of a U.N. peacekeeping force in Darfur.
The rebel raiders, who were well-armed, were concentrated around Birao's airfield, Gonda said, adding that civilians had died in Monday's attack, though he could not say how many.
But he dismissed the rebels' threat to advance on the capital. "Bangui is secure, they're far off," he said.
Central African Republic's remote north is a lawless area where armed raiders regularly loot villages and terrorise civilians, sending many fleeing into southern Chad.
Rebel spokesman Sabone said many of the UDFR fighters had previously fought with Bozize, who seized power in March 2003. He then held and won elections in 2005.
From AFP, reprinted on ReliefWeb...
The Central African Republic (CAR) accused neighbouring Sudan of "barbarous aggression" Monday after a recently formed rebel group captured the northern city of Birao, near the Sudanese border.
[Presidential] spokesman Cyriaque Gonda said on national radio that "unidentified assailants" from the western Sudanese region of Darfur had carried out the attack.
"The government and the Central African people ... strongly condemn this barbarous aggression which cannot be justified," he said.
Gonda said Sudan was responsible for "repeated violations" of the border and called on the international community to help restore the "territorial integrity" of CAR by sending UN peacekeepers to Darfur.
A small rebel group called the Union of Rallied Forces (UFR), which appeared in the north of CAR in 2005, claimed to have taken Birao after "brief fighting".
Headed by Florian Ndjadder-Bedaya, the son of a late general who was close to former president Ange-Felix Patasse, the group said CAR troops either defected or were captured.
Ndjadder-Bedaya announced in December his intention to overthrow CAR's current head of state, Francois Bozize, who ousted Patasse in 2003.
Birao is over 800 kilometres (500 miles) northeast of Bangui, in an area infested with criminal gangs and rebel groups hostile to the CAR leadership.
The rebels' success in the area comes after troop reinforcements were sent to the north earlier this month to protect civilians from bandits and forestall rebel activity.
CAR is one of Africa's poorest nations and has long been unstable, but insecurity has grown over the past year.
"We took control of Birao early this morning at 4:00 am (0300 GMT). There was brief fighting," said Abakar Sabone, who called himself a UFR captain.
"Numerous FACA elements based at Birao joined our forces and others were taken prisoner," he told AFP by satellite phone, without giving any further details.
A CAR military source did not confirm the rebel claims, stating he could not say whether they were "Central African rebels or if the assailants came from a neighbouring country".
A senior army officer confirmed that government troops in the Birao region had been "routed" and said the assailants had seized military vehicles and taken hostage Birao's deputy administrator.
"There were losses of life among the FACA," a military source said without giving a death toll. "All we know is they went around Am-Dafock to attack Birao," he said.
Earlier reports indicated Chadian rebels may have been behind the attack. Birao is close to a region in Chad where intense fighting has occurred between the army and rebels from the Union of Forces for Democracy and Development (UFDD).
New fighting broke out Sunday in the far east of Chad between government forces and UFDD rebels, who the Chad government accuses of being "mercenaries working for Sudan".
The UFDD, an alliance of previously competing rebel groups, launched an offensive on October 22 against the Chadian government of President Idriss Deby Itno, briefly occupying two towns near the Sudanese border before pulling back.
Chad and to a lesser degree CAR are home to tens of thousands of refugees from the fighting in Darfur, where at least 200,000 people have died as a result of fighting, famine and disease since 2003.
The Sudanese government has accused Chad of giving refuge to Darfur rebels but denies any involvement in militia attacks inside neighbouring countries.
Khartoum has vehemently rejected an August UN Security Council resolution calling for the deployment of up to 20,000 UN peacekeepers to stem the violence in Darfur.