The Central African Republic unveiled its new government on Friday, a broad coalition including representatives from rival armed groups, after fresh fighting between warring militias killed at least eight.
Prime Minister Mahamat Kamoun, who was appointed earlier this month, has been tasked with bringing rebel groups back into the mainstream to try to end the ethnic and religious violence gripping the country.
In the latest fighting, at least eight people were killed when armed groups clashed on Wednesday and Thursday in the southeastern region of Boda, the African peacekeeping force MISCA said.
"This followed the death of a 14-year-old Muslim boy... and a second Muslim subject who was looking for firewood," a MISCA officer told Agence France-Presse on Friday.
According to an official decree read on national radio, the new cabinet will be made up of 27 ministers and two deputies.
While some members were part of the old government, the group also includes three representatives from the mainly Muslim Seleka group, and two from the majority-Christian 'anti-balaka' militias.
The U.N. peacekeeping chief for the country, Babacar Gaye, had pressed for a new government to lead the country out of strife and elections.
The previous government resigned after the signing of a ceasefire pact in July.
Months of fighting in the poor and deeply unstable country has left thousands of people dead and forced around a million from their homes.
France and African Union countries deployed troops last December, nine months after the Seleka alliance ousted president Francois Bozize and placed one of their leaders, Michel Djotodia, in power.
Djotodia stepped down in January under international pressure for failing to halt widespread atrocities against civilians by rogue rebels, which also led to the emergence of "anti-balaka" (anti-machete) vigilante forces in Christian majority communities, bent on vengeance against Muslims.
A hospital worker said on Thursday that five people had been killed this week in fighting between armed militants and French peacekeepers in Bangui.
A staff member at the capital's community hospital said nearly 40 people were also wounded in the clashes.
It was also reported on Friday that three French soldiers had been injured following the clashes in a commercial area of the capital known as PK-5, which has become the last Muslim enclave in Bangui.
The fighting erupted after Gaye announced some 1,800 fresh U.N. peacekeeping troops will arrive in the country on September 15, bolstering the 5,800-strong African contingent in a mission to be known as MINUSCA.
"My main asset is not only to have troops, but to have a comprehensive approach for the protection of civilians and the stabilization of the country," Gaye told reporters after briefing the U.N. Security Council.
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