
Militants kill Egyptian U.N. peacekeeper in Central African Republic

Suspected Christian militias killed an Egyptian U.N. peacekeeper and wounded three others in an attack in southern Central African Republic on Sunday, the United Nations said in a statement.
The attack, which the United Nations said was carried out by anti-balaka militants, occurred in Gambo, about 100 km (60 miles) from the town of Bangassou, Reuters reports.
During the attack, five assailants who were reportedly anti-Balaka elements were killed, while the rest of the group fled.
More than 100 civilians and three Moroccan peacekeepers were killed in separate incidents in May and July in Bangassou.
Conflict has killed thousands in Central African Republic since Muslim Seleka rebels ousted President Francois Bozize in 2013, provoking a backlash from the Christian anti-balaka militia.
Violence spiked when former colonial power France ended its peacekeeping mission last year.
Since then, the United Nations’ 13,000-strong Central African Republic mission, known as MINUSCA, has struggled to restore order to a country where government control barely extends beyond the capital Bangui.
This latest killing brings to 13 the number of MINUSCA soldiers who have lost their lives in hostile actions since the beginning of 2017.
Five militants were also killed during Sunday’s clash, the United Nations said.