In a telephone call to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon yesterday, Hollande said UN troops were needed to help restore peace and prop up the administration of new interim president Catherine Samba Panza.
"The UN Security Council set a clear mandate (for peacekeepers) which must be quickly and firmly implemented. It's a question mainly of speeding up the preparation for a peacekeeping operation, in close partnership with the African Union," said a statement from the French presidency.
"We are working with a sense of urgency," said General Philippe Ponties in Brussels Wednesday, who took up the post as the mission chief for the force earlier this week.
The objective is to deploy the first soldiers "as quickly as possible" in the capital Bangui, he said.
France currently has some 1,600 troops in the country and the African Union force MISCA more than 5,000. But they have been unable to stem a looting pandemic and a cycle of revenge attacks between Muslim and Christian fighters.
Yesterday the self-proclaimed leader of the militias warned the new president not to attempt as she has vowed to crack down on the anti-balaka.
"Declaring war on the anti-balaka amounts to declaring war on the Central African population," Richard Bejouane told hundreds of militiamen gathered in Bangui. He claims their ranks number 52,000, including 12,000 in the capital.
Most of the ongoing violence is being blamed on anti-balaka attacks.
Samba Panza, a Christian who took over as interim president last month from ex-Seleka boss Michel Djotodia, said Wednesday her administration was "going to go to war against the anti-balaka."
"The anti-balaka have lost their sense of mission. They are now the ones who kill, who pillage, who are violent," she said.
On the streets on the capital, she appeared to have the support of the citizens.
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