Philip Obaji Jr.

Philip Obaji Jr.

Why Putin’s Private Army Ordered Soldiers to Torture Me

Photo Illustration by Erin O'Flynn/The Daily Beast/Getty ImagesBÉLOKO, Central African Republic—They were all wearing military fatigues and armed with Kalashnikovs when they showed up suddenly at about 5 o’clock one Friday evening at the start of December. The four men were soldiers from the Central African Armed Forces (FACA) who drove right up to where I was interviewing about a dozen people hoping to get cross the border.Among those I was interviewing were a couple of artisanal miners who had gathered in front of a security checkpoint in the Central African Republic (CAR) border town of Béloko. It is the country’s first customs checkpoint on the trade corridor linking the capital, Bangui, to the Cameroonian port city of Douala. A number of them had lost their homes following the fighting between rebels and Russian paramilitaries supported by FACA forces, and were hoping to find refuge in Cameroon.Suddenly, four gun-wielding soldiers appeared from nowhere, rushed me, and started to drag me away. I began to scream for help but the civilians around, including those I was interviewing, were too scared to intervene. Two armed Russian paramilitaries, who came to the scene when they heard me screaming, encouraged the soldiers to assault me, telling the FACA officials to beat me up until I confessed to being a criminal. When one elderly man courageously asked the soldiers why they were dragging me away on a stony road, one of them replied: “He’s a terrorist.”Read more at The Daily Beast.

Teenage Twins Say They Were Drugged and Raped by Putin’s Rampaging Private Army

Photo Illustration by Erin O'Flynn/The Daily Beast/Getty Images, Public Domain and Philip ObajiBOUAR, Central African Republic—Twin sisters were momentarily thrilled that they had escaped a harrowing abduction when Russian paramilitaries rescued them from kidnappers who snatched them from their home on motorbikes.Armed men had abducted Fatou and her twin sister, 17, from their home in the northwestern Central African Republic (CAR) market town of Bouar in September. The girls were being spirited out of town when Russian paramilitaries in a pickup caught up with them, arrested the men and rescued the girls.“We were so relieved when we saw the white soldiers,” Fatou recalled the feeling of the girls as she spoke to The Daily Beast. “We thought we were the luckiest girls in the world.”Read more at The Daily Beast.