Candidates for weekend elections in Central African Republic wrapped up campaigning on Friday with promises to put an end to years of religious and ethnic bloodshed in the impoverished nation.
Voters will cast their ballots on Sunday in a presidential run-off between former prime ministers Anicet-Georges Dologuele and Faustin-Archange Touadera and vote in the re-run of a first round legislative poll which was cancelled over irregularities.
Central
African Republic has remained one of the world's most unstable nations
since gaining independence from France more than five decades ago.
Investors have shied away from its gold, diamonds and uranium amid
regular coups and rebellions.
"At a certain moment
the state had collapsed. All the ingredients that make up a state had
fallen away," said Bangui's influential Catholic archbishop Dieudonne Nzapalainga.
The latest crisis erupted in early 2013 when Seleka rebels drawn mainly from the Muslim minority toppled President Francois Bozize, provoking deadly reprisals by Christian militia fighters.
Thousands
have died in the violence. And one in five Central Africans has fled
either abroad or internally, including most Muslims in the southwest,
who were targeted by a campaign of ethnic cleansing.
The themes of peace and reconciliation have been at the centre of both presidential candidates' campaigns.
On
the edge of the capital Bangui's PK5 Muslim enclave, dozens of trucks
and motorcycles carrying cheering Touadera supports wound through dusty
streets lined with roofless, looted homes and past checkpoints manned by
armed U.N. soldiers.
"Of course, we've organised
election. But that's only one element ... in emerging from this crisis,"
Touadera, a mathematics professor, said in a televised debate later of
Friday.
"There are still Central African brothers
with weapons ... Right after these elections, we must open dialogue with
them so that (disarmament) is automatically begun," he said.
The
election period, which began with a constitutional referendum
mid-December, has remained relatively peaceful. And turnout of nearly 80
percent for the first round of elections was widely viewed as an
indication of the people's desire to turn the page on the years of
violence.
"It's changing. I've seen the change," said Coretta Gonda,
25, who lost her aunt and younger brother to the fighting and had her
home looted. "God taught us to forgive. I'm ready to forgive."
Gonda
was among thousands who gathered in the national football stadium on
Friday for a final rally organised by Dologuele, a banker who has served
in regional financial institutions.
"The country
has fallen. We must build it back up again," he told a crowd of
thousands of supporters. "All of you here can build it back up."
Both
Dologuele and Touadera have close ties to deposed leader Bozize, who is
the target of an international arrest warrant and has been accused by
U.N. investigators of backing Christian militias.
Those links have raised concerns among some diplomats and U.N. officials. But Edouard Mathos Matandji,
a resident of the traditional Bozize stronghold of Boy-Rabe in Bangui,
has faith that the country is on the verge of a turn-around.
"It's
the politicians who have abused the Central African people ... We're
tired of that," said the 25-year-old Touadera supporter. "We're not in
the past. This is the present. The past is the past."
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