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Africa Subsaharan
Ouattara takes over in Cote d'Ivoire
2011-04-15
[The Nation (Nairobi)] Cote d'Ivoire President Alassane Ouattara began to assert his new authority today by sending his captured rival Laurent Gbagbo
... Former President-for-Life of Ivory Coast from 2000 to 2011. Laurent lost to Alassane Ouattara in 2010 but his representtive tore up the results on the teevee and he refused to vacate the presidential palace. French troops assisted the Oattara forces in extricating him from his Fuhrerbunker...
to a secret location and restarting vital cocoa exports.

Seeking to heal a nation broken by a four-month crisis pitting him against his strongman predecessor Gbagbo, Ouattara also called on the International Criminal Court
... where Milosevich died of old age before being convicted ...
to probe massacres carried out in the west of the country.

"I will speak shortly with the ICC's chief prosecutor so the court can begin investigations," Ouattara told journalists during his first major presser since being able to exercise executive power.

"These massacres are unacceptable... I am revolted," he said.

Hundreds were killed in western Cote d'Ivoire after forces loyal to Ouattara swept through the country to Abidjan earlier this month to oust incumbent president Gbagbo who had refused to admit defeat in a November run-off vote.
Massacres were centred on the town of Duekoue and troops on both sides of the conflict accused of involvement.

Chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo last week announced plans to launch a formal probe into mass killings in Cote d'Ivoire.

"I will do everything for these condemnations to set an example, not only for Ivorians, but also for Africa and the entire world," Ouattara said, expressing hope the probe could be wrapped up "as quickly as possible."
A front man for the United Nations
...aka the Oyster Bay Chowder and Marching Society...
mission in Cote d'Ivoire (UNOCI), which is safeguarding Gbagbo and his associates pending their trial for alleged crimes committed during the conflict, said he had been flown out of main city Abidjan.

"The helicopter transporting Laurent Gbagbo took off at 12.40pm heading to the north of the country," Hamadoun Toure said, declining to elaborate on his exact destination.

Ouattara said earlier that the former leader had been moved from a hotel in Abidjan where he had been held since being tossed in the slammer by Ouattara's forces in a bunker on Monday.

"As I speak to you, Mr Laurent Gbagbo is no longer at the Golf Hotel, he is in Cote d'Ivoire, well secured," Ouattara said. "Mr Laurent Gbagbo is a former head of state, he must be treated with consideration."

The four-month stand-off pitting Gbagbo against Ouattara threatened to plunge the country back into civil war, with Gbagbo's supporters largely controlling the south and Ouattara's allied former rebels the north.

With the formerly wealthy nation divided and broken by the conflict, Ouattara said he had ordered an immediate resumption of cocoa exports from the world's number one producer which were frozen by sanctions slapped on Gbagbo.

Asked when the vital exports would resume, Ouattara said: "Immediately."

"I signed a decree yesterday, the port is under control. I named an interim port manager so everything is underway for cocoa to be sent out," Ouattara said, referring to Abidjan's export terminal.

Around 400,000 tonnes of cocoa have accumulated on the dockside in Abidjan and the southwestern port of San Pedro during the crisis.

Ouattara said he would move into the presidential palace, in a district that saw some of the fiercest battles during 10 days of fighting, "in the coming few days" despite insecurity still reigning in parts of Abidjan.

Rights group Amnesia Amnesty International warned that Gbagbo's supporters were at risk of violent reprisals, despite both Ouattara and Gbagbo having called for fighters to lay down arms.

Armed men, some wearing military uniforms, have been conducting house-to-house searches in neighbourhoods, including Yopougon and Koumassi, where supporters of Gbagbo are living, Amnesty said.

One eyewitness told Amnesty how a policeman belonging to Gbagbo's ethnic group was taken from his house on Tuesday and rubbed out at point blank range.
Posted by:Fred

#9  Same folks. A continuation of the Christian-Animist locals vs Muslim immigrants civil war, now with the UN/France providing firepower for Muslims.
Posted by: Zebulon Thranter9685   2011-04-15 16:17  

#8  Oh, and I suspect Forces Nouvelles were the predecessor group to the guys the UN and France just put in charge of the country.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2011-04-15 16:13  

#7  On second thought, I don't really understand what's going on. They closed DOWN their legitimate _diamond mine_ in a grievously poor country because someone might use it for cover for diamonds from elsewhere?
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2011-04-15 16:05  

#6  I don't know, but I suspect that's who controls a lot of the diamond trade in the rest of West Africa. And if you notice, Cote D'Ivoire is right between two other diamond-producing regions. I am speculating, but I wouldn't be surprised, and if I had a diamond mine there, I'd sell them saying I bought them somewhere else in the region.

Checking Wackypedia:

Côte d'Ivoire (also known as the Ivory Coast) began to develop a fledgling diamond mining industry in the early 1990s. A coup overthrew the government in 1999, starting a civil war. The country became a route for exporting diamonds from Liberia and war-torn Sierra Leone.[4][12] Foreign investment began to withdraw from the Ivory Coast. To curtail the illegal trade, the nation stopped all diamond mining, and the UN Security Council banned all exports of diamonds from Côte d'Ivoire in December 2005.[4] However, despite UN sanctions the illicit diamond trade still exists in Côte d'Ivoire. Rough diamonds are exported out of the country to neighboring states and international trading centers through the northern, Forces Nouvelles controlled section of the country, a group which is reported to be using these funds to re-arm.[13][14]
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2011-04-15 16:00  

#5  You're forgetting diamonds

I do?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-04-15 15:27  

#4  "Gbagbo's ethnic group" Means faithful Black Christians and anyone else that did not support this scumbag Ouattara in the first place. Scumbag.
Posted by: newc   2011-04-15 12:41  

#3  The real nugget is buried in the last graph:

"Gbagbo's ethnic group"
Posted by: mojo   2011-04-15 11:31  

#2  You're forgetting diamonds.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2011-04-15 07:19  

#1  So far Muslims controlled oil & heroin. Now they also control chocolate.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-04-15 03:51  

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