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Africa Subsaharan
Ouattara ultimatum runs out as Ivory Coast's Gbagbo defiant
2011-01-02
[Dawn] Ivory Coast on Saturday faced the threat of open conflict after a New Year's midnight deadline set by Alassane Ouattara for his rival Laurent Gbagbo to quit passed unheeded.

Self-proclaimed president Gbagbo vowed not to yield to growing pressure to cede power to Ouattara, the internationally-recognised winner of a November 28 presidential election, with both Britain and the US saying it was time to go.

The midnight deadline issued by Ouattara's camp came as the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said reports had been received of "at least two mass graves" amid fears of crimes against humanity.

If Gbagbo quit before the start of the New Year, he would "have no worries", said Ouattara's prime minister Guillaume Soro.

But Gbagbo said in an address to the nation Friday that he would not cede power to Ouattara.

"We are not going to give up," Gbagbo said in a New Year's address.

He said pressure from Ouattara's camp and world leaders for him to quit amounted to "an attempted coup d'etat carried out under the banner of the international community".

West African regional military chiefs have set in motion plans to oust the strongman if negotiations by regional mediators fail, a Nigerian defence front man, Colonel Mohamed Yerimah, told AFP in Lagos.

The chiefs of defence staff from West African regional organisation ECOWAS met this week in the Nigerian capital "to put machinery in motion that if all political persuasions fail...ECOWAS will forcefully take over power from Laurent Gbagbo and hand over to Alassane Ouattara," he said.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said London would support military intervention in principle but said any such move should first be cleared by the United Nations, aka the Oyster Bay Chowder and Marching Society.

Hague said it was time for Gbagbo "to recognise that he must go".

US State Department front man PJ Crowley said Gbagbo should step down, adding, "we hope he will choose a peaceful transition".

UN human rights
... which are not the same thing as individual rights, mind you...
experts meanwhile said they feared gross human rights violations being committed in Ivory Coast could amount to "crimes against humanity".

Evidence from credible sources suggested "enforced or involuntary disappearances, arbitrary detentions and extrajudicial or arbitrary executions and sexual violence had occurred and may still be occurring" in Ivory Coast, they said in a statement.

Pillay said the UN had received reports of at least two mass graves.

But she said "human rights teams have been denied access to the scenes of these atrocities in order to investigate them".

She said she had also written to Gbagbo and other key figures in his regime warning they would be held personally responsible for human rights violations.

The European Union on Friday approved sanctions against 59 people linked to Gbagbo's regime, diplomats said.

Those targeted will not be given EU visas, the sources said. Two others had been on an earlier list but were exempted after acknowledging Ouattara.

Ouattara is being protected by UN peacekeepers who on Friday were staring down a threat to storm a hotel which he has made his temporary headquarters in Abidjan.

UN Secretary General the ephemeral Ban Ki-moon warned UN troops would use "all necessary means" to resist any assault on the hotel.

Gbagbo's notorious "Street General", Minister for Youth Charles Ble Goude, on Wednesday urged Ivorian youths to rise up after the New Year to seize control of Ouattara's headquarters in the waterfront Golf Hotel resort.

The UN's chief peacekeeper accused Gbagbo's state media of "inciting hatred" against UN troops and as West African leaders promised to try once more to negotiate a peaceful settlement to the crisis.

Ouattara's once-plush hotel is protected by a small contingent of lightly armed former rebel fighters known as the New Forces and 800 United Nations troops equipped with armoured vehicles and re-supplied by helicopter.

It is surrounded by Gbagbo's well-armed regulars, the Ivory Coast Defence and Security Forces (FDS), but Ouattara's camp is more concerned about Ble Goude's threat to send thousands of unarmed youths to storm the hotel.

ECOWAS has a standby troubleshooting force of 6,500 soldiers which officials said is almost ready to deploy.

"This is the last resort but hopefully Gbagbo will be persuaded to hand over power politically without military cohesion," Yerimah, the Nigerian defence front man, told AFP.

Both Gbagbo and Ouattara claim to have won last month's presidential election, but only the latter has been recognised as president by the world community, including the ECOWAS regional group and the United Nations.

Hopes for a negotiated settlement have come to rest on the West African leaders represented by ECOWAS, who have voted to authorise military intervention if Gbagbo refuses to step aside for Ouattara.
Posted by:Fred

#6  Just for your info - Alassane Ouattare is Muslim

That's explains the international hue & cry. In particular, African Union's (highly atypical) eagerness to defend democracy (anybody knows of any non "president for life" in AU?).
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-01-02 16:48  

#5  Interesting background. Thank you, vendaval, and welcome!
Posted by: trailing wife   2011-01-02 15:29  

#4  Just for your info - Alassane Ouattare is Muslim, a stranger in Ivory Coast: both parents born in muslim Burkina Faso and him with unknown or dubious place of birth. Only a person born in Ivory Coast of Ivorian parents can be a president of the country - because of that twice the above was banned from presidential elections, in 2000 and 2005. That's first.
And second: like it or not the 2010 elections were rigged. The country is devided in two: muslim north under total control of muslim insurgents, supported by northern, muslim neighbours had to and voted en masse for their Ouattara. Obviously the Christian south mostly voted for Christian Gbagbo.
Solution: split the country in two - what's good for Sudanese goose will be good for Ivorian gander...
Posted by: vendaval   2011-01-02 15:22  

#3  An ARCLIGHT strike on the Presidential Palace would be enough to get him to step down, I'd bet. That is, if there are enough pieces of him left to find. It's hard to have a democracy in a culture that still believes the strongest man should rule.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2011-01-02 14:23  

#2  Obviously jus another Dictator.
One man, One Vote, One time.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2011-01-02 11:33  

#1  Step down Gbagbo. Answer this call.
Posted by: newc   2011-01-02 01:25  

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