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WSWS : News
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Student protests erupt in Côte d'Ivoire
By John Farmer
2 June 1999
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Côte d'Ivoire (formerly the Ivory Coast) in West Africa
has been the scene of a month-long conflict that has completely
paralysed all education activity in the country. The 60,000 students
organised in the Federation of Ivorian Studentsalso comprising
high school pupilsare campaigning for a 12-point list of
demands. The main call is for the generalisation of
student scholarships, meaning that entry to higher education should
be broad-based.
The federation called off its boycott of lectures and classes
on Wednesday, May 19, with leaders saying that they had accepted
a compromise and had provisionally ended the protest. But on May
21 a court in Abidjan, capital of Côte d'Ivoire, sentenced
six student leaders to five years hard labour each, without appeal,
as well as fines totalling 15 million francs. They were charged
with disturbing the public peace. In response, the
federation announced a renewal of nation-wide protests, including
meetings, sit-ins and demonstrations. ''The government has demonstrated,
by imposing the heavy sentences on our colleagues, that it is
not prepared to resolve the educational crisis. We have therefore
decided to enter into top gear,'' said Bla Gouede, secretary general
of the federation.
Other issues taken up by the students include the demand for
the provision of free medical care; the lifting of examination
requirements for entry to higher educational institutions; building
more university halls of residences; removing conditions attached
to student loans; suspension of insurance programs at high school,
and lifting the payment of 50 percent school fees for those studying
in private schools. The students are also demanding the return
of Youpougon student residences that were taken over for use by
the police two years ago. The government gives more priority
to security than to education, they point out.
The protests over the last month began with boycotts and sit-ins
in private and public schools and universities across the country
and escalated into collisions between students and the police.
Côte d'Ivoire President Henri Konan Bedi banned his ministers,
including Prime Minister Daniel Kablan Duncan, from travelling
to the interior of the country because of concern for their safety.
The situation further deteriorated when the government placed
a ban on all student meetings and sit-ins, in an attempt to stop
the clashes. This was followed by the indefinite closure of all
schools and universities. In a further response to the unrest
President Bedi called a special meeting of the ruling Democratic
Party of Côte d'Ivoire. He denounced the students for being
used by political parties that were movements of destruction
and insurrection in character. He insisted: We should
not minimise this situation, we have to react now.
The police killed at least one student and injured many others.
In the first week of protest the students, acting on a rumour
that the police had lynched a fellow student, burned down the
council offices and police station at the university community
of Abobo, in Abidjan. In addition, the prime minister and several
government officials have had their houses in their hometowns
burnt down.
The Federation of Ivorian Students has a long history of organising
protests since its formation in 1960. It has been banned on many
occasions, operating underground for most of the last decade,
until the ban was last lifted in 1997.
The background to the government's attack on education is a
three-year programme of austerity measures dictated by the International
Monetary Fund. Côte d'Ivoire is burdened with a $19 billion
external debt; the servicing of which takes $650 million a yearapproximately
40 percent of the country's annual export income. A recent visit
by the IMF earlier this month directed the Ivorian government
to implement, without delay, all economic and financial measures
agreed under the first phase of the Structural Adjustment Program
(SAP) over the last three years. Whilst some progress has
been made, the IMF complained at the government's inability
to monitor public expenditure. It called for stricter implementation
of directives before the second phase of the SAP could be negotiated
in July and August.
Côte d'Ivoire has a population of around 16.8 million
and is among the 42 least developed countries in the world. After
independence in 1960, the country became one of the fastest growing
economies in sub-Saharan Africa, with a development program based
on cash crops for exportcocoa, coffee and palm oil. With
gross domestic product increases of between 8 and 12 percent a
year, and a huge public sector investment program in the 1970s,
it was described as an African "economic miracle".
After the collapse of world commodity prices in the 1980s and
the high public spending program of President Felix Houphouet-Boigny
(president from independence until 1993), the economy was left
with huge debts and a much reduced income with which to repay
them.
A World Bank report shows that the level of the population
afflicted by poverty has risen from 11 percent in 1985 to a current
level of 30 percent. The report attributes the high level of poverty
to the unequal distribution of wealth, which is confirmed in a
further report produced by the French Development Corporation.
This report reveals that 95 percent of the wealth of the country
is concentrated in the hands of just 5 percent of the population.
This 5 percent is made up of 12 families, all of whom are members
of the ruling Côte d'Ivoire Democratic Party.
See Also:
Africa
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