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Subject:
From:
Sidi Sanneh <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 6 Oct 2002 17:04:29 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (78 lines)
Culled from BBC World Service

Ivory Coast troops and rebel soldiers have exchanged gunfire on the
outskirts of the rebel stronghold of Bouake, held by mutinous soldiers for
more than two weeks.

As the build-up continued, Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo said on
Sunday he had refused to sign a ceasefire with the rebels. He described
them as attackers.

Togolese Foreign Minister, Koffi Panou, one of the West African mediators
trying to facilitate an agreement, said the Ivory Coast Government was
arguing that the rebels should disarm first.

The mediation efforts have been aimed at ending an uprising which has split
the country into two, claimed hundreds of lives and left thousands
displaced.

Government and rebels forces have been sending heavy reinforcements to the
front line.

French military observers say the government has moved hundreds more
soldiers into at least two positions on the outskirts of Bouake.

There are also reports that the rebels have sent a convoy of 40 heavily-
armed vehicles towards Bouake from Korhogo, their second-largest
stronghold.

Delaying tactics?

A scheduled meeting at which West African mediators were due to urge
President Gbagbo to authorise the signing of a truce was delayed.

1,000 French troops are monitoring events on the ground

Later, Mr Panou said: "For the moment, they will not sign. The ceasefire
will not take place." The government has twice failed to sign the deal - on
Friday and Saturday.

The mediators have warned that they would leave if the Ivory Coast
government failed to sign for a third time.  The country's foreign minister
has already apologised for the failure to sign on Saturday.

He said the government had simply forgotten to write a letter of authority
for the army commander to sign the ceasefire agreement.

The BBC's Paul Welsh in Ivory Coast says members of the mediation team are
not convinced - and diplomats agree with the Ghanaian defence minister that
the government has been deliberately dragging its feet.

Our correspondent says the government only agreed to talks under pressure
from the mediation teams sent by neighbouring countries and has been
preparing for an offensive to recapture the rebel-held north.

The rebels are holding much of north and central Ivory Coast

The rebels have been calling for the overthrow of President Gbagbo and for
fresh elections in which all political parties would be allowed to
participate.

Many of the rebels come from the largely Muslim north of the country and
have long complained of discrimination by Christian southerners.

Sunday's ceremony was supposed to take place in Tiebissou, effectively the
front line since rebels took control of northern areas 17 days ago.

Mediators were sent by the regional body, Ecowas, in the hope of stopping
the violence escalating into a full-blown civil war.

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