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Latest update: 22/03/2011
- Alassane Ouattara - Ivory Coast - Laurent Gbagbo - military - political crisis
Youths join army to fight for Gbagbo
Thousands of youths loyal to incumbent Ivory Coast leader Laurent Gbagbo have heeded a call by his youth minister, Charles Blé Goude (pictured), to join the army to fight the internationally recognised winner of a Nov. 28 run-off, Alassane Ouattara.
By News Wires (text)
REUTERS - Thousands of young supporters of Ivory Coast's Laurent Gbagbo answered a call to join the army on Monday, while Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf warned the crisis risked destabilising the West African region.
Around 400 Ivorians have died and hundreds of thousands have fled their homes since a dispute over a Nov. 28 election that has since escalated into open conflict, with daily gun battles and heavy weapons fire in Abidjan.
Johnson-Sirleaf, whose country has received some 90,000 refugees from fighting in west Ivory Coast, told Reuters Ivory Coast was "already at war" and gave the starkest warning yet that peace in a region recovering from years of war was at risk.
"It's a serious threat to the stability of Liberia, and I might say to the stability of all neighbouring countries," she said in an interview in Monrovia.
"There was a lot of attention to the Ivory Coast before the situation in Libya and the Middle East," she said. "The crisis in Ivory Coast slipped off the radar," she added, noting donor reaction to a $46 million U.N. aid appeal had so far been "very slow and inadequate".
U.N.-certified results showed the poll was won by Gbagbo's rival Alassane Ouattara, who is backed by forces who opposed Gbagbo in the 2002-2003 civil war and who still hold the north.
Gbagbo, who says the result was fixed, remains in control of the army and on Saturday the leader of his "Young Patriots" youth wing urged them to sign up for military service.
Chanting slogans like "We will kill them now" and "the rebels will die", thousands of prospective recruits crowded into a stadium at army headquarters to sign up. A soldier danced to music and shook his AK-47 rifle in the air, to loud applause.
As it filled up, military officials tried to seal a gate but were overwhelmed by the crowd who forced it open and burst in.
The large turnout underlines the growing influence of Young Patriot leader Charles Ble Goude, who on Saturday called on around 10,000 supporters at a rally to "liberate" the country.
"Our country is under attack, so we're organising ourselves to re-establish order," Goude told Reuters at the signing up. "The legal way to do it is to put them in the regular army."
Ble Goude is accused by rights groups of inciting attacks on Ouattara supporters, U.N. peacekeepers and West Africans in Ivory Coast. He denies the charges.
A group of 15 Young Patriots were admitted to a hospital in Abidjan with serious injuries on Monday saying they had been ambushed by a dozen attackers on their way to the army event.
"They pointed their Kalashnikov's at us and ordered us into some shacks were we were beaten with sticks and truncheons until they let us go," said one of them, Patrice Kouame.
On Sunday, thousands joined an exodus from Abidjan, the main city in the world's top cocoa grower, crowding onto buses with their belongings and heading to the countryside.
The United Nations says some 435 people have been killed and another 450,000 forced from their homes since the crisis began.
The heaviest fighting between rival camps has taken place in Abidjan but clashes have also flared in the west as northern pro-Ouattara forces have pushed south across the ceasefire line that split the country after a 2002-03 civil war.
The 2002-2003 rebels, whom Ouattara last week recognised as his military and renamed the Ivory Coast Republican Forces (FRCI), said they captured a fourth town in the west on Monday.
"The town of Blolequin is now under the control of the FRCI since this morning, after intense combat," said Mara Lacine, a spokesman for the FRCI in the west.
A local cocoa trader in nearby Guiglo town said pro-Gbagbo troops had retreated to there from Blolequin. If the former rebels take Guiglo, the next town along, they will have a direct road through a forest to the major port of San Pedro.
The African Union earlier this month affirmed that Ouattara was president and proposed he lead a unity government including pro-Gbagbo elements, a proposal rejected by Gbagbo's camp.
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Comments (5)
People have been asked to
People have been asked to incorporate the army to join regular and republican forces (FDS) against rebels and foreign destabilisation attempts, and not to get paid.
So, yes the country is getting poorer by the day, yes they are enrolling to defend their country, NO!! they are not getting paid.
Duty of impartiality
Could you at least MENTION that the UN certified results:
1) were provisionnal and not confirmed nor validated by the constitutional court, which is the country's highest court and which is also responsible for swearing in the winner....
2)Were announced in the alleged Presidential winner;s headquarters (Golf Hotel) before Foreign Media exclusively, and in violation of the previous dispositions
Please by fair and informative!
cette reponse massive reflete le chomage
pensez vous que ces jeunes naifs ont repondu par élan patriotique?
Non!!!
ceci est un bon indicateur que les jeunes sont en chomage et n'ont vraiment rien a faire.
Voila un exemple éloquent de l'incompetence d'un tyran qui est resté au pouvoir pendant 10 ans sans changer la destinée de son peuple.
Blé Goudé joue sa derniere carte et ne veut pas tomber seul!
Le voila qui veut exploiter une jeunesse naive et mal instruite.
je demande
pourquoi la France support la rebellion ?
I like France24
I like the way you can go anywhere to get the news, keep it up
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