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Côte d'Ivoire: Peacekeeping Continued

AfricaFocus Bulletin
Aug 5, 2004 (040805)
(Reposted from sources cited below)

Editor's Note

West African leaders and UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in a late July summit in Accra, Ghana, won an unexpected new agreement from Ivorian leaders for a timetable to implement the peace settlement signed in January 2003. Some 3,500 UN peacekeeping troops, out of an authorized strength of 6,240, are in the country, with the largest contingents from Bangladesh, Benin, Ghana, Morocco, Niger, Senegal, and Togo. But the country is still divided, and it is clear that meeting the new timetable for disarmament and new election procedures will depend on continuing pressure on Ivorian leaders.

This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains two recent updates from the UN's Integrated Regional Information Networks, and the executive summary of an extensive analysis of the obstacles to peace in Côte d'Ivoire, published by the International Crisis Group earlier in July.

A summary of the background to West African and UN mediation and peacekeeping efforts in the country is available at http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/minuci/background.html Additional information on the current UN operation is at http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/unoci

For additional background and links on Côte d'Ivoire, visit http://www.africafocus.org/country/cotedivoire.php

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Côte d'Ivoire: Peace summit sees disarmament starting in October

President Laurent Gbagbo gets another month to drive through political reforms

UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN)
http://www.irinnews.org

ACCRA, 1 Aug 2004 (IRIN) - Under heavy pressure from a dozen African leaders and UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, the leaders of the rival factions in Côte d'Ivoire have agreed to a new timetable to put the country's faltering peace process back on track, with the aim of starting a disarmament programme on 15 October.

An agreement signed on Friday night after two days of talks in the Ghanaian capital Accra committed them to enacting all the political reforms demanded by the French-brokered Linas-Marcoussis peace agreement of January 2003 by the end of August.

The key reforms are: a new nationality law to make it easier for West African immigrants to Côte d'Ivoire and their descendents to gain Ivorian nationality, a new law to make it easier for such immigrants to gain title to the land they work and allow their children to inherit such land and, finally, a reform of the constitution to make it easier for Ivorians of immigrant descent to become president.

The Accra agreement also commits President Laurent Gbagbo to issuing a decree to formally delegate executive powers to Prime Minister Seydou Diarra, the independent head of a power-sharing government which collapsed at the end of March.

In the past, Diarra's decisions were often been over-ruled by Gbagbo, who enjoys near absolute authority under the terms of Côte d'Ivoire's constitution.

The Accra accord aims to prevent this situation from recurring. It demands that Gbagbo enshrine in law the delegation of specific powers to Diarra to implement the Marcoussis peace agreement. These powers were outlined in a letter from the president to the prime minister on 12 December.

With the reform process apparently back on track, the rebel movement occupying the north of Côte d'Ivoire and the four main opposition parties represented in parliament agreed to return to the government of national reconciliation.

They withdrew their 26 ministers at the end of March in protest at the security forces's heavy handed repression of a banned opposition demonstration in Abidjan. UN investigators said at least 120 people died in two days of political violence in the city.

Diplomats said Gbagbo had meanwhile agreed to reinstate three opposition ministers whom he fired in May, including rebel leader Guillaume Soro.

This obligation was not specifically mentioned in the joint statement published by Gbagbo and his opponents at the end of the Accra agreement

Along with the resurrection of the power-sharing government and the enactment of political reforms by parliament, the Ivorian factions committed themselves to starting a long-delayed process of disarmament, demobilisation and rehabilitation (DDR) "by October 15 at the latest."

The Accra agreement stated "The DDR process will include all paramilitary groups and militias."

Diplomats said this made clear that paramilitary groups supporting Gbagbo as well as the rebel forces which have occupied the north of Côte d'Ivoire since the country erupted into civil war in September 2002 would have to be disbanded.

Several previous efforts by the international community to put the faltering Ivorian peace process back on track have failed.

Each time, Gbagbo has stalled on implementing political reforms demanded by the Marcoussis accord.

The rebels have meanwhile have refused to hand in their weapons and allow government administrators back to the north, saying ther were sufficient guarantees in place for free and fair presidential elections to be held in October 2005.

But this time, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the African Union and the United Nations have set up a joint team to monitor implementation of the Accra agreement closely and issue a joint progress report every two weeks.

Ghanaian President John Kuffuor, who chaired the Accra talks in his capacity as ECOWAS chairman, predicted that there would still be problems ahead. But he warned that ECOWAS might apply sanctions to any party which failed to fulfil its side of the latest peace deal.

"The going may be tough tough. It may not be easy, but the parties must persevere," Kufuor told a press conference at the end of the talks.

These were attended by 11 other African heads of state, including Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria and Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, and UN Secretary General Kofi Annan.

"ECOWAS might impose sections if the various parties fail to live up to the accord," Kufuor warned. "I hope our other parties will support us when it comes to that," he added. "Côte d'Ivoire must succeed. We cannot sit by and let a sister nation fail."

Addressing the same press conference, Annan declined to say whether the United Nations might also impose sanctions on erring parties to the Ivorian peace agreement.

"I do not want ot prejudge what the (Security) Council might do if the parties failed to live up to the agreements they themselves have signed," the UN Secretary General said.

Hours before he spoke in Accra, the Security Council threatened to take unspecified measures against the government of Sudan if it failed to disarm the Janjawid militia movement, accused of commiting extensive atrocities in the country's troubled Darfur province, within 30 days.

The situation is Sudan was also discussed by the African summit in Ghana.

Obasanjo said as he left the meeting on Friday that the situation in Darfur had deteriorated since the beginning of July, when it was discussed at the African Union summit in Addis Ababa.

The Nigerian president, who is the current chairman of the African Union, said the organisation therefore needed to beef up the force of 270 troops from Nigeria, South Africa and Rwanda which it was committed to sending to Darfur, in support of 96 African Union peace monitors already deployed in the region.

"With what we have on the ground now, it appears we must have additional forces of protection," Reuters quoted him as saying as he left the Accra summit.

Over the past week, there have been suggestions that western powers, including Britain, might also send troops to Darfur, but the Sudanese government has flatly rejected the idea of such a deployment.

On Saturday, France announced that it was moving 200 of its troops stationed in the Chadian capital N'djamena up to the Sudanese border to help Chad's own security forces prevent further raids across the frontier by Janjawid militia groups.

France said it had also made available its Transall military transport planes based in N'djamena to help airlift relief supplies to nearly 200,000 refugees from Darfur who have crossed into eastern Chad. Heavy rains have cut the dirt road which links the remote region to the capital.

France's ambassador to Chad, Jean-Pierre Bercot, told the French news agency AFP on Sunday that two French military helicopters were flying these supplies onwards from the eastern town of Abeche to individual refugee camps.

This material site comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian information unit, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.


Côte d'Ivoire: UN Finds 99 Bodies in Mass Graves After Rebel Clashes

UN Integrated Regional Information Networks

August 3, 2004
Abidjan

UN human rights experts have uncovered three mass graves packed with at least 99 bodies in the northern town of Korhogo where heavy clashes between rival rebel factions took place in June, the UN mission in Côte d'Ivoire (ONUCI) said.

"Some of these people were killed by bullets. And according to reliable and consistent witness accounts, others suffocated to death," ONUCI said in a statement on Monday night. It said that the UN team which visited Korhogo to probe the clashes would publish its final report as soon as possible.

A bulletin from the UN's World Food Programme, issued on Friday, suggested an even bleaker picture.

"The UN mission in Côte d'Ivoire is investigating reports of human rights abuses in Korhogo... So far, four mass graves have been found with 150 corpses. The investigation continues," it said.

On 20 and 21 June, clashes erupted in the rebel capital Bouake, in central Côte d'Ivoire, and Korhogo, a rebel-held city 225 km to the north.

Fighters loyal to rebel leader Guillaume Soro said at the time they had fought with supporters of Ibrahim Coulibaly, a former army sergeant known by the initials "IB." He lives in France, but is widely seen as a challenger to Soro for the rebel leadership.

The New Forces rebel movement accused President Laurent Gbagbo of masterminding the two attacks as an act of provocation in conjunction with President Lansana Conte of Guinea. It said that 22 people died in the clashes, but diplomats and humanitarian sources suspected from the start that the death toll was much higher.

Several residents in Korhogo told IRIN that the number of dead could reach 500, since many people were killed in the city after the fighting when supporters of Soro went on a manhunt for people suspected of backing IB.

The same sources said that those who died of suffocation had been crammed into a container which for several months has been used by the rebel forces in Korhogo as a makeshift prison.

In its statement, the ONUCI human rights team said it remained concerned about those people still in detention.

New Forces officials declined to comment on the statement, saying they were waiting to see the United Nations' final report on the Korhogo clashes.

"We are surprised because we participated in the investigation and we haven't yet received the findings," rebel spokesman Antoine Beugre told IRIN by telephone from Bouake.

A spokesman for IB told French news agency AFP that Soro's troops had engineered the massacre in the north to dispose of any opponents to his regime.

"The existence of these mass graves prove that UN peacekeepers must be deployed rapidly around the country, both in the north and the south, to ensure the protection of all people," Vincent Rigoulet said from Paris.

The ONUCI team spent 17 days investigating allegations of human rights abuses, wrapping up on 26 July.

However, the statement of its initial findings was only published a week later after a West African summit in the Ghanaian capital Accra aimed at putting the faltering peace process in Côte d'Ivoire back on track.

"They waited because they did not want it to obstruct the Accra meeting," one West African diplomat told IRIN..

The two-day summit on Thursday and Friday last week extracted a fresh pledge from all sides in the conflict to implement the political reforms demanded by the French-brokered Linas-Marcoussis peace agreement of January 2003. It also committed the government and rebels to start a long-delayed process of disarmament by October 15.

The West African diplomat said the ONUCI statement would pressure the rebels into "keeping up their side of the (Accra) bargain" and remind them that the international community was keeping a close eye on them.

It would also send a positive signal to those Ivorians who think that the UN has been shielding the rebels, he added.

Last May, the government of President Laurent Gbagbo was severely criticised by a UN human rights investigation for its bloody repression of a banned opposition demonstration in the commercial capital Abidjan on March 25.

The UN human rights experts concluded that Gbagbo's security forces had killed at least 120 people, many of them innocent civilians, in two days of bloodletting.

It said most were killed by soldiers, policemen and shadowy paramilitary gunmen linked to Gbagbo during a manhunt for suspected rebel supporters after the street demonstrations had been dispersed.

Given the preliminary findings of the UN probe into the events in Korhogo, the rebels' own treatment of suspected opponents in their ranks appears to have been no less brutal.


International Crisis Group

Côte d'Ivoire: No Peace in Sight


12 July 2004

[For the extensive full report, see
http://www.crisisweb.org/home/index.cfm?id=1235&l=1]

Executive Summary

The January 2003 Linas-Marcoussis Accords have been badly compromised by a lack of good faith and political will. All the key issues -- nationality, eligibility for elections, and disarmament -- that they attempted to address in order to restore peace and national unity to Côte d'Ivoire and lead it to presidential elections in October 2005 are stalemated. No political actor has shown the will to break the impasse. Opposition parties have left the Government of National Reconciliation. The Forces Nouvelles, remnants of the armed group that attempted a coup in September 2002 and subsequently took control of the north of the country, not only refuse to disarm until after elections, but are flirting with secession.

The international community, and especially the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), needs to take on the spoilers more assertively and openly. Its diplomacy should be backed by a strong attempt to end impunity. Otherwise there is real risk not only of continued violence but that the war could spread across West African borders.

Several elements of the Ivorian equation work against a political solution. The situation is triangular, linking the political elite, the security forces and militias, and business interests connected to economic, often criminal, networks. The latter work in conjunction with the political elite and are quick to take advantage of the services of either security forces or militias. None of these groups is homogenous, and internal rivalries are aggravated by the fact that President Gbagbo and the Front Populaire Ivoirien (FPI) are relative newcomers to the political-business networks dominated for almost forty years by the late President Houphouët-Boigny's Parti Démocratique de la Côte d'Ivoire (PDCI) party.

The long-term context of the crisis includes twenty years of economic downturn, an explosion of the number of unemployed (but often well-educated) youth, and competition for the illicit spoils of the state. The de facto partition between north and south has made this competition even sharper. The FPI accuses the Forces Nouvelles "rebels" of having risen to power by illegitimate means, while the latter accuse President Gbagbo, winner of the dubious 2000 elections, of using militias and special forces to intimidate and kill political enemies and economic challengers.

To get to the heart of Côte d'Ivoire's problems, it is necessary to understand their economic dimension, and in particular, in terms of the old dictum, to "follow the money". The political impasse is exceptionally lucrative for almost everyone except ordinary citizens. Major government figures have been accused of using state monies, especially from the Enron-like maze of interlinked institutions within the cocoa marketing system, for personal enrichment, purchasing weapons, and hiring mercenaries. Members of the Forces Nouvelles have been accused of monopolising lucrative economic activity, including the trade in cotton and weapons. Some observers have gone so far as to say that the killings of perhaps 120 citizens attempting a peaceful protest in Abidjan on 25-26 March 2004 originated in a power struggle between the ruling FPI and the opposition PDCI over who would control the lucrative rents emanating from corruption at the port.

It is not just leading politicians who may gain from the current situation of neither peace nor war. Many others, from businessmen close to the government to municipal political bosses, benefit through business interests that are frequently protected (or expanded) by militias of otherwise unemployed youth styling themselves as "Young Patriots". These "patriots" themselves can become quite rich. Militia leaders drive in expensive cars with numerous bodyguards and are said to receive as much as $80,000 a month from the presidential coffers. At the same time, members of the security forces use roadblocks throughout the country to stop civilians and shake them down.

The Linas-Marcoussis Accords are the product of compromise and thus contain elements displeasing to every party. However, calls to scrap or renegotiate them miss an important point. As some in Côte d'Ivoire ask, what improvements would a new document make? The key issues addressed in the Accords are as pressing as ever. The problems lie in their application, and the sophisticated strategies of the two sides that range from the legalistic (pitting the constitution against the Accords) to the demagogic. Diplomacy built upon the assumption that the political actors aim to address these issues in good faith is doomed to failure. Low-level insecurity can be good for business.


AfricaFocus Bulletin is an independent electronic publication providing reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with a particular focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus Bulletin is edited by William Minter.

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