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Africa Subsaharan
Côte d'Ivoire: Food Price Hikes Spark Riots
2008-04-01
At least a dozen protestors were wounded during several hours of clashes with police on 31 March as they demanded government action to curb food prices.

"We have so far registered eight people wounded at the hospital in Yopougon and four others in Cocody," said Thomas Kacao of the Ivorian Consumers Association (ACCI), one of the civil society groups behind the march.

The demonstrations took place in Cocody, where Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo has a residence, and in Yopougon, a thriving area for shopping and nightlife. Ivorian police used tear gas and batons to disperse youts protestors who were burning tires and overturning parked cars. At the height of the demonstration, before riot police started firing tear gas, IRIN saw around 1,500 protestors chanting "we are hungry" and "life is too expensive, you are going to kill us."

Kacao said the ACCI has recorded an "unending" rise in the cost of basic foodstuffs over the last three months. Some goods have increased by as much as 30 percent and 60 percent from one week to the next. "When women go to the market they don't stop complaining about how much more expensive things have become," he said. "Today, with 2,000 CFA (US$4.80) they cannot buy enough food to feed even a family of five," Kacou complained.

IRIN's requests for comment from the Ivorian ministry of commerce, to which the Kpangui's NGO had addressed its criticisms, were declined. But a member of the commerce minister's cabinet told IRIN, "I think the government will intervene by making a television announcement to calm things down," he said.

The World Food Programme says high global fuel prices coupled with an increased demand for food in wealthier Asian and Latin American markets and an increased demand for bio-fuel are behind food price rises around the world. So far the worst instability resulting from high prices has been felt in West Africa, which is where many of the poorest countries in the world are found.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  Expect to read a lot more reports like this in the near future.

Pakistan heading for yet anther wheat crisis
Posted by: Phil_B   2008-04-01 17:50  

#2  After the ivorians' treatment of french expatriates (rapes and looting), they can just die; only trouble, food shortages in pleasant africa will mean more resentful and assertive migrants in depopulating Europe, sight.
Posted by: anonymous5089   2008-04-01 10:53  

#1  They just don't understand that this is necessary cause Al Gore et al, who are the Gulfstream Palace energy consumers, say this is the pain we you must pay for bio-conversion of food to fuel. Yes, you Africans will once again pay in lives for this generation's Rachel Carson crusade, but this time because of food, not DDT.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-04-01 08:40  

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