|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Côte d'Ivoire: President Gbagbo stokes up ethnic conflict
By Chris Talbot
15 December 2000
Use
this version to print
Laurent Gbagbo, who became President of Côte d'Ivoire
in October with French support after the ousting of military dictator
General Guei, went ahead with controversial parliamentary elections
on December 10.
This was despite having declared a state of emergency and a
nationwide curfew, following clashes between the police and demonstrators
from the main opposition party, the Rally of the Republicans (RDR).
Over 20 were killed in the clashes. The RDR members were protesting
over the decision of the Supreme Court to ban their leader, Alassane
Ouattara, from standing in the elections, because it is claimed
he is not an Ivorian national. The United Nations and the European
Union withdrew their observers and condemned the elections.
Speaking in France, Ouattara called for an election rerun.
A former IMF official, he had also been prevented from standing
in the October presidential elections by the same court. Outtara,
a Muslim from the north of the country-the south is predominantly
Christianis accused of not originating from Côte d'Ivoire
but from neighbouring Burkina Faso.
The issue of Ivorian nationality has been whipped up by Gbagbo,
and before him by Guei, against the large number of immigrants
in the country. There are reports of machete-wielding mobs attacking
RDR demonstrators in the capital Abidjan with the tacit support
of the police. These clashes follow a report that paramilitary
police had beaten Ouattara's personal secretary to death the previous
week. The RDR has protested that several of its leaders were badly
beaten whilst held in police custody. In the period after the
presidential elections, 171 people were killed, largely as a result
of police attacks on RDR supporters.
After Ouattara was prevented from standing, the RDR boycotted
the parliamentary elections. In 29 of the 32 constituencies in
the northern part of Côte d'Ivoirethe RDR's strongholdno
voting took place because RDR supporters destroyed election material
or chased away officials. Regional leaders have threatened that
the north will secede, and in the northern town of Kong, Ouattara's
home, state officials and police were forced to leave after local
youths took up arms and burnt down their houses. Le Patriote,
a pro-RDR newspaper, carried a front page showing a map of Côte
d'Ivoire with the north separated under the headline Côte
d'Ivoire on the brink of secession.
The danger is not just of a breakaway of the Muslim north,
however. The issue of nationality now threatens to plunge the
country into civil war. Up to 50 percent of the population in
Côte d'Ivoire are immigrants, having arrived from Burkina
Faso and other neighbouring countries over several decades, attracted
by the prospect of jobs and greater economic development.
As cocoa prices continue to fallCôte d'Ivoire is
the world's main producer of this cash crop-poverty and unemployment
has soared under IMF structural adjustment programmes. The southern
ruling elite in Abidjan has turned increasingly to promoting ethnic
and religious divisions. Gbagbo's party, the Ivorian Popular Front
(FPI), won 91 out of the total of 225 parliamentary seats, with
the Democratic Party of Côte d'Ivoire (PDCI) winning 70.
The PDCI, headed by Konan Bedie, was in power over several decades
until the military coup of General Guei at the end of last year.
It is also committed to the agenda of Ivorian nationalism.
Gbagbo appears determined to hang on to power, despite having
now incurred the wrath of Western governments, including both
France and the United States, for having excluded Ouattara from
the elections. The United States and Western banks back Ouattara
as a free market economist, and it was planned to bring him into
Gbagbo's government.
Unlike the United States, France did not call for a re-run
of the presidential elections. Gbagbo's FPI has connections with
the Partie Socialiste of French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin.
France has also lobbied for emergency credit for Côte d'Ivoire
from the European Union. As the magazine Africa Confidential
explained, If Gbagbo moves convincingly to stabilise the
country and promote reconciliation with Ouattara's RDR, he can
rely on important diplomatic and economic support from Paris.
According to the Washington Post, Gbagbo had agreed
with the RDR to postpone the parliamentary elections for one week.
This would have allowed them to appeal to the Supreme Court to
have the ban on Ouattara lifted, as documents showing his Ivorian
nationality could have been produced. Instead of announcing the
deal on television as planned, Gbagbo sent his Interior Minister
to announce that the elections would proceed as originally planned.
Diplomats from France who had negotiated the deal between Gbagbo
and the RDR were said to be furious and moving
to cut off most aid. US diplomats were also angry and the
United States was putting on hold plans to renew aid. The
result may well be not only to drag the country into civil war
but also destabilise the whole of West Africa, of which Côte
D'Ivoire was once the economic centre.
See Also:
General Guei ousted in Côte
d'Ivoire clashes
[28 October 2000]
Côte
d'Ivoire
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |