Abdoulaye Miskine

After a failed coup attempt in 2001, Patassé put Miskine in charge of leading a special militia unit consisting of 300 Chadian mercenaries due distrust with Bozizé and the refusal of Idriss Déby to send reinforcements.

Patasse tasked Miskine to fight zaraguina as well as armed oppositions around the CAR-Chadian Border and protect the president.

[4][1] On 2 October 2002, Chad and the Central African Republic signed the final communiqué of the Libreville Accords to restore the diplomatic relations between the two countries.

Before he left CAR, Patasse decorated Miskine with commander insignia of the Central African Order of Merit.

[5] In January 2012, Miskine allied with the Central African Armed Forces and Chad National Army in fighting against Baba Laddé.

However, he broke the act because the government arrested two members of the Democratic Front of the Central African People in Bangui.

In September 2013, Miskine joined the pro-Bozizé group, Front pour la restauration de l’ordre constitutionnel en Centrafrique.

[14] Cameroon released Miskine on 27 November 2014 in exchange of 26 hostages, including a Polish Catholic priest, who were abducted by Democratic Front of the Central African People.

Subsequently, he flew to Brazzaville with Denis Sassou Nguesso's private plane and was welcomed by Congolese Minister of Interior, Raymond Mboulou, when he arrived.

[16] In February 2019, he signed the peace agreement in Khartoum and the government offered Miskine as Minister of the Modernization of the Administration and Innovation of the Public Services.

[21] Responding to the arrest, the Central African government issued the extradition request of Abdoulaye Miskine and N'djamena refused Bangui's demand.