رد: التدخل العسكري الفرنسي في افريقيا الوسطى -متابعة مستمره-
French soldiers conduct reconnaissance on the roof of the Mpoko airport in Bangui, Central African Republic November 23, 2013. With the country slipping deeper into chaos, former colonial power France plans to boost its force there to around 1,000 troops to restore law and order until a much bigger African Union force fully deploys. The land-locked country has been gripped by violence since the mainly Muslim rebels, many of them fighters from neighbouring Sudan and Chad, seized power in the majority Christian country in March. Some 460,000 people - around a tenth of the population - have fled the sectarian violence their takeover ignited. Picture taken November 23, 2013. *******/Joe Penney
A French soldier guards a checkpoint at the Mpoko airport in Bangui, Central African Republic, November 23, 2013. *******/Joe Penney
French soldiers inspect a taxi at a checkpoint at the Mpoko airport in Bangui November 23, 2013. World powers, led by France, are scrambling to contain a crisis that Paris and U.N. officials have warned could lead to genocide in Central African Republic, which slipped into chaos after rebels ousted the president in March. *******/Joe Penney
A French soldier inspects a car at a checkpoint at the Mpoko airport in Bangui November 23, 2013. World powers, led by France, are scrambling to contain a crisis that Paris and U.N. officials have warned could lead to genocide in Central African Republic, which slipped into chaos after rebels ousted the president in March. *******/Joe Penney
A file photo taken on October 10, 2013 shows French soldiers of the BOALI operation in Central African Republic standing guard at a checkpoint near Bangui Airport. France's defence minister said on November 26, 2013 that Paris would deploy about 1,000 soldiers to Central African Republic for six months to support an African peacekeeping force. AFP PHOTO / ISSOUF SANOGO
French soldiers of the BOALI operation in Central African Republic keep a lookout at the Bangui airport on October 10, 2013. The Central African Republic has been shaken by a recent increase in clashes between ex-rebels of the Muslim Seleka coalition that led the coup and local self-defense groups formed by rural Christian residents, the religion of around 80 percent of the population. The poor but mineral-rich nation was plunged into chaos when a coalition of rebels and armed movements ousted longtime president Bozize and took the capital Bangui in March. AFP PHOTO / ISSOUF SANOGO
French soldiers conduct reconnaissance on the roof of the Mpoko airport in Bangui, Central African Republic November 23, 2013. With the country slipping deeper into chaos, former colonial power France plans to boost its force there to around 1,000 troops to restore law and order until a much bigger African Union force fully deploys. The land-locked country has been gripped by violence since the mainly Muslim rebels, many of them fighters from neighbouring Sudan and Chad, seized power in the majority Christian country in March. Some 460,000 people - around a tenth of the population - have fled the sectarian violence their takeover ignited. Picture taken November 23, 2013. *******/Joe Penney
A French soldier guards a checkpoint at the Mpoko airport in Bangui, Central African Republic, November 23, 2013. *******/Joe Penney
French soldiers inspect a taxi at a checkpoint at the Mpoko airport in Bangui November 23, 2013. World powers, led by France, are scrambling to contain a crisis that Paris and U.N. officials have warned could lead to genocide in Central African Republic, which slipped into chaos after rebels ousted the president in March. *******/Joe Penney
A French soldier inspects a car at a checkpoint at the Mpoko airport in Bangui November 23, 2013. World powers, led by France, are scrambling to contain a crisis that Paris and U.N. officials have warned could lead to genocide in Central African Republic, which slipped into chaos after rebels ousted the president in March. *******/Joe Penney
A file photo taken on October 10, 2013 shows French soldiers of the BOALI operation in Central African Republic standing guard at a checkpoint near Bangui Airport. France's defence minister said on November 26, 2013 that Paris would deploy about 1,000 soldiers to Central African Republic for six months to support an African peacekeeping force. AFP PHOTO / ISSOUF SANOGO
French soldiers of the BOALI operation in Central African Republic keep a lookout at the Bangui airport on October 10, 2013. The Central African Republic has been shaken by a recent increase in clashes between ex-rebels of the Muslim Seleka coalition that led the coup and local self-defense groups formed by rural Christian residents, the religion of around 80 percent of the population. The poor but mineral-rich nation was plunged into chaos when a coalition of rebels and armed movements ousted longtime president Bozize and took the capital Bangui in March. AFP PHOTO / ISSOUF SANOGO
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