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<!-- /*--><!--/*--> "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> SABI NAIJA BLOG: Infamous cannibal Mad Dog Strikes Again

Sunday, 26 January 2014

Infamous cannibal Mad Dog Strikes Again

Infamous cannibal Mad Dog who last week killed a Muslim man in revenge for the murder of his pregnant wife and ate part of his leg has struck again. Images have surfaced of Ouandja Magloire preparing to eat the body of a lynched man in the Central African Republic capital of Bangui. The victim another Muslim man was murdered and his body dragged through the streets after being attacked by Christian mob of men baying for blood.
Mad Dog is seen in favourite yellow t-shirt (or the t-shirt he prefers to wear for acts of cannibalism), taking a knife to the victims chest. The last event, was for revenge according to Mad Dog for the murder of his pregnant wife and sister-in-law and baby by suspected Muslims. The man was one of two attacked in revenge for the lynching of a taxi driver from Sango a day earlier. It appears that Mad Dog wasn’t involved in the lynching’s, but turned up in the aftermath to enjoy his cannibalistic tendencies. Two other Muslim men had a lucky escape as they were able to get away to the protection of French and African peacekeeping forces.
Mad Dog was seen licking blood off his knife from the victim after slicing him. He said after he had eaten part of his first victim: “They broke down the door and cut my baby in half. I promised I would get my revenge. I stabbed him in the head. I poured petrol on him. I burned him. Then I ate his leg, the whole thing right down to the white bone. That’s why people call me Mad Dog.”
Again like the last attack, no one intervened, however for many living in the region, it’s just another part of the daily violence. There have been thousands of deaths in the past year between Muslims and Christians in tit-for-tat violence, rape and looting across the country as neither religious group will back down. Transitional government leader Alexandre Ferdinand Nguendet issued a strong statement begging for calm: “The holiday is over the chaos is over, the pillaging is over, and the revenge is over.”
The country’s first Muslim leader was installed by rebels in March 2013 and fighting has been going on ever since, however the leader Michel Djotodia stepped down as president last Friday. In recent times, sectarian violence has stabilised, mainly due to a truce brokered by the French army which has seen rival militiamen lay down their arms.

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