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From:
oko drammeh <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 8 Dec 2010 09:31:21 -0800
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Gbagbo Rejects Pressure to Leave Power in Ivory Coast
Scott Stearns | Abidjan08 December 2010, VOA

West African leaders are calling on Laurent Gbagbo to step down as president of 
Ivory Coast, in favor of a former prime minister who won a vote that was 
certified by the United Nations.
Mr. Gbagbo appears determined to hold on to power in the face of international 
pressure.

Gbagbo spent much of the last decade joining fellow West African heads of state 
in trying to resolve regional issues, most recently military rule in Niger.

But Mr. Gbagbo is now on the outside, excluded from an emergency meeting of the 
Economic Community of West African States to discuss the political crisis in 
Ivory Coast.

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan chairs the regional alliance. He says Mr. 
Gbagbo's former colleagues want him to yield power, without delay, because he 
lost last month's vote to former prime minister Alassane Ouattara.

"We believe that, in a democratic election, the votes of the people must count," 
he said. "Where we have a democracy where the votes do not count, ECOWAS will no 
longer accept such a pseudo or false democracy.  And, we believe that the 
results declared by the electoral commission and accepted by the U.N. special 
representative there is the authentic one, and Ouattara is the person who we 
support as the president of Cote d'Ivoire."

Mr. Ouattara's claim to the presidency is based on the United Nations 
certification of electoral commission results that show him winning 54 percent 
of the vote. Mr. Gbagbo's claim to the presidency is based on Ivory Coast's 
constitutional council annulling as fraudulent nearly ten percent of all ballots 
cast, giving him 51 percent of the vote.

Both men have named new prime ministers and have the support of rival armed 
forces. Mr. Gbagbo is supported by senior military officers who control southern 
regions. Mr. Ouattara is supported by former rebels who control northern 
regions.

Mr. Gbagbo's rebuke by former colleagues and Ivory Coast's suspension from the 
regional alliance is not likely to change his approach to the political crisis. 
The constitutional council's decision is unappealable. Mr. Gbagbo is moving 
forward with a new cabinet and a new foreign minister, who has threatened to 
expel the United Nations special representative.

In the media blackout that has followed this vote, all foreign news broadcasts 
are suspended.  State-run television has made no mention of the original 
electoral commission results or calls from the African Union, the United 
Nations, the European Union, France, the United States and Britain for Mr. 
Gbagbo to step down.

Instead, the national broadcaster is running a series of interviews with Gbagbo 
supporters.

Alcide Djedje, who is Mr. Gbagbo's new foreign minister, used his time on the 
nightly news to threaten the U.N. special representative here.

Djedje says the United Nations was meant to help Ivory Coast out of its crisis, 
not to interfere in its internal affairs.  He says this is the last time the 
U.N. can act in that fashion.   He says, if the U.N. special representative here 
continues to call Mr. Ouattara the winner of the election, he will be expelled.

 

 

 
Find this article at:
http://www.voanews.com/english/news/Gbagbo-Rejects-International-Pressure-to-Leave-Power-in-Ivory-Coast-111515199.html




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