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Editorial: El País

  • The Central African Republic has become an experimental breeding ground for political and military instability, threatening to spread turmoil into the greater region.
  • Groups like the Russian Wagner and the US company Bancroft Global Development are paving the way for a privatization of defense politics.
  • Persistent conflicts between Christian and Islamist militias keep the Central African Republic among the poorest countries, despite its natural mineral wealth.
  • The local government is 'diversifying' its security relations, potentially a euphemism for outsourcing defense to mercenaries.
  • The presence of private armies linked to superpowers like Russia and the United States implies indirect intervention in the conflict.
  • The Russian group Wagner, associated with Vladimir Putin's regime, has a record of human rights violations.
  • Wagner and Bancroft's operations in the country extend beyond military confrontation to political and social influence.

Conclusion: The geopolitical interests of superpowers such as Russia and the United States could further destabilize the Central African Republic, prioritizing their strategic goals over the country's needs.