• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Ivory Coast November 2010 Election

Lets see surrender and be hacked to death or go down fighting ? Me I would take the second option.
 
tomahawk6 said:
Lets see surrender and be hacked to death or go down fighting ? Me I would take the second option.
The clock ticks....
 
Stop the clock !

Ivory Coast strongman arrested after French forces intervene
By Colum Lynch and William Branigin, Monday, April 11, 12:14 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/ivory-coast-strongman-arrested-after-french-forces-intervene/2011/04/11/AFOBaeKD_story.html

UNITED NATIONS — Ivory Coast strongman Laurent Gbagbo was arrested Monday by French-backed forces of president-elect Alassane Ouattara, raising hopes for an imminent end to the strife that has wracked the West African country since Gbagbo refused to acknowledge his defeat in a November presidential election.

Following an attack on Gbagbo’s residence in Abidjan, the country’s major city, by French forces earlier Monday, troops loyal to Ouattara went in and seized Gbagbo, according to U.N., French and Ivorian officials.

Gbagbo “has been arrested,” said Youssoufou Bamba, the U.N. envoy of president-elect Ouattara. “He is alive” and will be “brought to justice,” he said in a telephone interview.

Initial reports indicated that French troops had captured Gbagbo and turned him over to Ouattara’s forces. But Bamba subsequently told reporters that the arrest operation had been carried out by forces loyal to Ouattara.

“I am clear about that,” he told reporters outside the U.N. Security Council. “That’s the Republican Forces of Cote d’Ivoire who have conducted the operation. Gbagbo is arrested. He is under our custody. . . . Right now, he is being brought to a safe location for the next course of action.”.................
 
UN peacekeeping chief Gbagbo surrender doesn't end Ivory Coast crisis, but a major step
By The Associated Press
http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5iu1ZBdJ5Zf_57DoC_LDrfLLzJt_Q?docId=6532229

U.N. peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy says the surrender of renegade leader Laurent Gbagbo doesn't end the political crisis in Ivory Coast, but it's an important step toward halting the violence.

After briefing the Security Council on Monday about developments in the west African country, Le Roy told reporters that Gbagbo and his wife have requested and received U.N. protection.

Le Roy says Gbagbo is staying in the same hotel where his rival Alassane Ouattara did and has been assigned the same U.N. police officers who protected him during the stalemate.

The U.N. chief emphasizes that Gbagbo's arrest was handled by forces loyal to Ouattara and that U.N. peacekeepers and French forces were not involved.
 
Sarkozy's micro-managed intervention in Ivory Coast could win votes

The French president has avoided accusations of necolonialism in his carefully gung-ho Africa campaigns
Kim Willsher in Paris
11 April 2011

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/apr/11/sarkozy-ivory-coast-vote-winner

Within moments of Laurent Gbagbo's capture, French president Nicolas Sarkozy telephoned Gbagbo's rival, Alassane Ouattara, the internationally recognised winner of last year's election.

Initial reports suggested that French troops had carried out the arrest, but they were immediately denied in Paris: French troops had not arrested Gbagbo, he had been handed over to them by his own presidential guard.

Then more reports: Ouattara's forces had arrested Gbagbo. And finally: French forces helped the rebels, but no French soldier had set so much as one boot on Gbagbo's lawn.

The way Paris tells it, French and United Nations forces laid siege to Gbagbo's residence and reduced part of the building to rubble with tank and helicopter missiles in an attempt to take out "heavy weaponry".

Then they stopped and waited for Ouattara's forces to go in. This scenario, if true, is the best Sarkozy could hope for: the French had saved the day but had not been seen to deliver the final coup de grâce, which could have prompted charges of neo-colonialism.

In recent weeks Sarkozy has miraculously recovered from France's diplomatic disasters in North Africa. His foreign policy had been dismissed as "diplomacy without courage" after Paris initially offered to help crush unrest in Tunisia.

With a presidential election a year off – and his popularity ratings at all-time low – Sarkozy had to do something. First he led the way into Libya, driving through a UN resolution that would let French warplanes loose and make everyone else – except perhaps David Cameron – look indecisive.

Emboldened, France obtained a similar UN resolution allowing its Operation Licorne forces in the Ivory Coast to act "in defence of civilians", which in practice meant support for Ouattara.

Licorne was beefed up to 1,400 troops, who immediately took control of Abidjan airport and began patrolling the city while French "intelligence operatives" were rumoured to be in the country.

Sarkozy was said to be in regular contact with Ouattara – over whose marriage he officiated when mayor of Neuilly – and reportedly managed the conflict in minute detail. It was Sarkozy who reportedly told Ouattara to hold back the attack on Gbagbo for fear of turning him into a martyr, and Sarkozy who allegedly refused to allow French troops to take control of Abidjan's bridges, even though it would help the evacuation of civilians. Photographs of the French flag flying over the Charles de Gaulle bridge at the heart of a former colonial capital would not, he decided, send the right message to Africa.

At each step, Paris insisted military action was preceded by a formal demand from the UN for French forces to act, and both France and the UN insisted their aim was not to overthrow Gbagbo. But last night the big question over Gbagbo's arrest remained, as Le Monde asked: "At what point did French forces intervene?"

The French ambassador in Abidjan, Jean-Marc Simon, insisted that "at no moment" did any French troops enter "into the gardens or the presidential residence". The paper quoted a defence ministry source admitting the French and UN forces had been "supporting the operation" to arrest 65-year-old Gbagbo.

The point over who actually arrested Gbagbo may seem pedantic, but Sarkozy has been treading a fine line between being damned for intervening – accused of neo-colonialism and of attempting to boost his domestic ratings with battlefield successes – or damned for sitting back and doing nothing. Inaction is not Sarkozy's default position – particularly in the Ivory Coast, which is home to 15,000 French citizens.

Le Figaro has suggested Sarkozy's war adventures could indeed be a vote-winner: "The president of the republic thinks the French experience a certain pride in seeing their country play an important role on the world scene and that this role is recognised outside its borders. It's good for morale," the paper said.
 
Back
Top