Centrafrique : la fabrique d’un autoritarisme
- Central Africa
- Central African Republic
- Russia
- Rwanda
- Borders
- Collective mobilizations
- Conflict resolution
- Les études du CERI
- Crime
- Diasporas
- Fight against crime and corruption
- Governance
- Nationalism
- Peace / Peacekeeping
- Regional integration
- Security policy
- Sovereignty
- Terrorism
- Transnational actors
- Violence
- Wars / Conflicts
This text analyses the conditions in which the Central African Republic, a failed state emerging from an existential crisis, is able to play on its own weaknesses and a particular regional and international configuration to coerce the political arena, terrorizing its own population by creating an enemy that is inevitably foreign, and using Russia as an instrument to perpetuate itself. The means and techniques of coercion are extremely modern, even if they are based on a repertoire of coercive practices already well established in Central Africa. Such authoritarianism is based on the construction of a specific threat (transnational armed groups), a lacklustre international community that is exhausting itself in implementing outdated solutions, and a security offer that relegates UN peacekeeping or European training missions to the sidelines: Russian and Rwandan military involvement reflects a desire to substitute the regional and international management of the crisis, while at the same time maintaining a concessionary economy in the mining and agricultural sectors, the primary beneficiaries of which continue to be the rulers in Bangui.
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Etude_268_269.pdf | 1.2 MB |