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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Former IMF deputy to stand in Côte d'Ivoire presidential
elections
By John Farmer
23 December 1999
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The regime of President Henrie Konan Bedie has reacted with
increasing desperation ever since the August decision by Alassane
Ouattara, leader of the main opposition party in Côte d'Ivoire
(Ivory Coast), to stand in the presidential elections in 2000.
It has banned demonstrations for six months, arrested Ouattara's
supporters and whipped up an atmosphere of national chauvinism.
Ouattara leads the Rally of the Republicans (RDR) and is seen
as a serious threat to Bedie and the Democratic Party of Côte
d'Ivoire (PDCI), which has ruled since independence. In exile
in France since September, Ouattara has been given an ultimatum
by the Ivorian government: stay in exile or return to be imprisoned,
alongside other leading members of his party, on trumped-up fraud
and forged document charges.
The charges flow from an earlier effort by the regime to prevent
Ouattara from standing in the elections by claiming that he was
not an Ivorian citizen and that his father is from the neighbouring
country of Burkina Faso. After Ouattara produced documents to
prove his citizenship, an investigation was launched into their
validity. On September 14 the police arrested 388 RDR supporters
who had gathered outside Ouattara's house in anticipation of his
arrest. They were later released.
The RDR rallied the support of around 10,000 in a demonstration
on September 27, demanding official recognition of Ouattara's
Ivorian nationality. Government security forces attacked a further
rally and protest demonstration on October 27. The government
claimed it had banned the rally at the last moment in order to
justify its teargas attack on demonstrators and the arrest of
20 RDR members.
The 20 RDR members were held in prison until a trial on November
10. Eleven of the 20, all leading members, have been jailed for
two yearseffectively barring them from standing in parliamentary
and local elections in the year 2000. Those barred include Henriette
Dagri Diabate, RDR General Secretary and Ouattara's deputy, as
well as four sitting members of parliament. Five ordinary members
received one-year sentences for committing acts of violence and
vandalism.
Ouattara is regarded as a crucial candidate for the RDR. In
the 1980s he worked as deputy managing director at the IMF and
was responsible for implementing IMF Enhanced Structural Adjustment
Facility (ESAF) policies in several of the Côte d'Ivoire's
neighbours. The programme was responsible for causing the collapse
of education, health and welfare measures.
Between 1990-93 Ouattara served as Prime Minister under the
dictatorial presidency of Felix Houphouet Boigny, who had ruled
Côte d'Ivoire since independence in 1960. Ironically, in
1992 Ouattara himself introduced the law recently used to jail
the 11 RDR leaders.
Following Boigny's death in 1993, Ouattara resigned his post,
after losing a constitutional dispute that ensured the succession
of the current president, Konan Bedie, rather than Ouattara.
The RDR was formed in September 1994 by dissenters from the
ruling PDCI in response to the demand of Western governments,
the IMF and World Bank to "democratise" political systems
in Africa and accelerate free-market privatisation measures. Its
founders feared that much-needed aid and development funds were
under threat if the one-party state did not accede to IMF demands.
Previous hopes that Ouattara would run in the 1995 presidential
elections were thwarted, but he had announced that he would be
prepared to contest the 2000 election when his contract with the
IMF ended in July this year.
Even in Côte d'Ivoire, which had one of the best economic
growth rates in Africa in the early 1990s, economic restructuring
and austerity measures have resulted in growing poverty and unemployment
and have provoked social unrest. The application of ESAF measures
to education earlier this year resulted in prolonged student protests
and strikes, the closure of universities, and the sentencing of
student leaders in May to five years hard labour.
Côte d'Ivoire is the largest cocoa producing country
in the world. In the last month the Bean Farmers Association carried
out a protest against privatisation and low world cocoa prices,
which make it impossible for them to cover their own costs. Their
nine-day boycott of the newly privatised marketing network cut
off bean supplies and temporarily pushed cocoa prices up.
In a further indication of growing social tensions, the opposition
paper Le Patriote said that Bedie's intervention to support
the re-election of Adiko Niamkey as General Secretary of Côte
d'Ivoire's main trade union federation, the UGTCI, was carried
out to prevent a general strike. Another opposition
paper, Notre Voie, went further. The re-election of Niamkey,
who has presided over the collapse of his members' living standards
over the past 15 years, has been achieved only by fraud, the paper
said.
The increasing destabilisation of Côte d'Ivoire, previously
regarded as one of the most stable and pro-western of the African
countries, is prompting growing concern within both the US and
French governments. On November 1, James Rubin of the US State
Department expressed anxieties about the situation in Côte
d'Ivoire, particularly the arrest of opposition party leaders.
The US government might be "compelled to reassess our past
excellent relations", Rubin warned.
The Bedie government described Rubin's remarks as "external
interference". After critical comments from the Jospin government,
Bedie sought to reassure French reporters that There is
nothing to fear because the Ivory Coast is governed by the rule
of law. France is by far the largest investor in Côte
d'Ivoire and receives much of its exports.
Growing popular opposition to Bedie's ESAF measures has clearly
fuelled support for the RDR, even though Ouattara is for a more
rigorous application of the same policies. Ouattara's presidential
programme maintains that Acceleration and deepening of structural
reforms remain central in removing impediments to private enterprise
and sustaining economic growth.
The PCDI regime, whose leadership is made up of a small group
of wealthy families, is being torn apart by internal division.
Bedie has reportedly released the imprisoned student leaders,
in spite of the fact that they have vowed to continue their campaign,
in an attempt to diffuse opposition. In his continuing campaign
to keep the presidency he is utilising Ivorian chauvinism. That
is why allegations about Ouattara's citizenship have played such
a role. A third of the population are originally from countries
that now border Côte d'Ivoire, such as Burkina Faso and
Mali.
The current borders of all these countries have only been in
place since 1960. Prior to that the whole area was French West
Africa. Conflicts over land have developed to the point that on
November 4 some Burkinabes were physically driven out of Côte
d'Ivoire. Initial skirmishes have now led to thousands returning
to their country of origin. Given the sharply deteriorating
social conditions and political tensions, several commentators
have pointed to the dangers of civil war developing in the country.
See Also:
Côte d'Ivoire's economy
dependent on child labour
[22 October 1999]
Africa
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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