Chad came under the spotlight last weekend when at least 24 people were killed and another 100 seriously wounded by Chadian soldiers sent to repatriate their compatriots from the mainly Christian CAR, according to officials there.
The Chadian government said it was pulling out from the peacekeeping force because of "a wanton and malicious campaign" against its troops, one it said aimed to make them "bear the responsibility" for all the country's troubles.
It said the practical steps of the withdrawal will be tackled in "common agreement" between Chad and the African Union.
"In the meantime Chad will assume without fail its peace mission in the zones it is responsible for in the CAR," said the statement, which did not give details about the areas.
Chadian soldiers have been accused of siding with the mainly Muslim Seleka movement -- which seized power in March 2013 and held it until January this year -- and of showing passivity toward abuses some of them carried out against the population.
CAR's interim president Catherine Samba Panza, who succeeded Seleka leader Michel Djotodia when he stepped down in January under international pressure, announced Tuesday the opening of an investigation into the killing of the 24 people by Chadian soldiers.
It was the worst-known incident involving foreign troops since French and African peacekeepers deployed in CAR late last year amid an upsurge of violence.
A MISCA officer said on Sunday that the soldiers had fired after they were attacked, but locals said the soldiers had deliberately fired on the crowd.
In the past year, the country -- one of the poorest in the world -- has been racked by Muslim-Christian fighting that has claimed thousands of lives and caused hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes.
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