Between the 16th and 19th cent., much of the region was
subject to devastating slave raids. The Baya people, seeking refuge from
the Fulani of northern Cameroon, arrived in what is now the Central
African Republic in the early 19th cent.; the Banda, fleeing the Muslim
Arab slave raiders of Sudan, came later in the century. French
expeditions, pushing out from the Congo, made treaties with local tribal
chiefs and occupied the area in 1887.
The region was organized in 1894 as the colony of Ubangi-Shari and was united administratively with Chad in 1906 and incorporated into French Equatorial Africa
in 1910. Chad later became a separate French territory. Much of the
region was leased to French concessionaires, whose fostering of forced
labor and other abuses sparked rebellions in 1928, 1935, and 1946. The
population of Ubangi-Shari actively supported the Free French forces
during World War II.
In 1946 the colony was given its
own territorial assembly and representation in the French parliament.
In the French constitutional referendum of 1958 the country opted for
membership in the French Community. It received autonomy and took its present name. Full independence was attained on Aug. 13, 1960, under President David Dacko.
(The nationalist leader Barthélémy Boganda, founder of what was for
years the country's only political party, the Social Evolution Movement
of Black Africa [MESAN], had been killed in a plane crash in 1959.)
The Central African Republic had a parliamentary government until Dec., 1965, when a military coup led by Col. Jean-Bédel Bokassa
(Boganda's nephew) overthrew the Dacko regime, dissolved the national
assembly, and abrogated the constitution. The military regime, with
Bokassa as both president and head of MESAN, dealt harshly with
dissenters. Despite the brutal nature of Bokassa's regime, France
continued to invest heavily in the country's economic development and
financed the 1977 ceremony in which Bokassa crowned himself emperor of
the renamed Central African Empire. His excesses aroused intense public
opposition and, after a government-ordered massacre, the French military
intervened.
Bokassa was removed from power in a 1979
coup and Dacko was reinstated. In 1981, Dacko was reelected president
but was overthrown by General André Kolingba in a bloodless coup.
Kolingba became president and head of the military and of MESAN,
establishing a dictatorial rule. Parliament legalized opposition parties
in 1991, and in 1993 Ange-Félix Patassé won the presidency in the
country's first multiparty elections. A new constitution adopted in 1995
sought to decentralize the government through the establishment of
regional assemblies. However, the cash-poor government encountered
mounting unrest over its failure to provide steady pay to civil servants
and soldiers, as well as allegations of corruption and incompetence.
After
army mutinies in Apr. and May, 1996, Patassé formed a new government
that included Kolingba supporters, but the country's main opposition
groups refused to join the coalition. A third mutiny erupted in Nov.,
1996, and degenerated into ethnic feuding before it was crushed by
French troops in Jan., 1997. Patassé announced a new national unity
government, naming Michel Gbezera-Bria, an independent, as prime
minister. Mutinous troops continued to occupy a military base in Bangui,
however, and new fighting broke out in June, 1997. France ended its
military presence in the country in 1999 and was replaced by an
all-African peacekeeping force. In Sept., 1999, Patassé was reelected.
Unsuccessful
coup attempts were mounted against the president in 2001 and 2002; they
were put down with aid from Libyan and other forces. Libyan troops were
withdrawn after the Nov., 2002, coup attempt and replaced by
peacekeepers from the Central African Economic Community. In Mar., 2003,
while Patassé was abroad; supporters of former general François Bozizé,
who had twice before attempted to oust the president, seized power, and
Bozizé was named president. Some 30,000 people fled to Chad after the
coup. Patassé remained abroad in exile; in 2006 he was convicted in
absentia of corruption. Some of Patassé's supporters have continued to
fight in the country's northwest.
Bozizé subsequently
established the broad-based National Transitional Council to draft a
new constitution, and announced that he would step down and run for
president after it was approved. In Dec., 2004, the new constitution was
approved. National elections were held in Mar., 2005, followed by a
runoff in May. Bozizé, who was the front runner after the first round,
was elected president in May, and his National Convergence coalition won
42 of the 105 seats in the national assembly. Attacks beginning in
mid-2005 by unidentified armed groups in the northern part of the
country caused several thousand people there to flee to Chad.
In
Jan.–Mar., 2006, Bozizé was authorized by the national assembly to rule
by decree, and reorganized the civil service and took anticorruption
measures, including dismissing three government ministers. In June there
were clashes between government forces and Chadian rebels, who had
entered the Central African Republic in the north. A rebel uprising in
the northeast that began in Oct., 2006, captured several towns there.
Although it was put down by mid-December with the assistance of forces
from France and several French-speaking central African nations,
fighting recurred in the region in 2007. Several rebel groups signed
accords with the government in Feb. and Apr., 2007, but despite this
fighting continued. The instability in the north also led to an increase
in lawlessness and banditry in the region, especially in 2008. In June,
2008, the government signed a peace agreement with two rebels groups.
Source: www.factmonster.com
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