Tag Archives: Ivory Coast

Gbagbo ally says I.Coast leader insincere on reconciliation

A top ally of ex-Ivory Coast president Laurent Gbagbo on Monday accused the country’s new leader of being dishonest in his efforts to heal divides two years after a brutal civil conflict.

Gbagbo loyalist Damana Adia Pickass captured global media attention when he seized the piece of paper with results from Ivory Coast’s fiercely disputed 2010 presidential election and tore it up in front of journalists as the tally was being read out for the first time.

Gbagbo’s refusal to accept defeat to current President Alassane Ouattara in that poll sparked fighting that killed an estimated 3,000 people.

Adia Pickass fled to Ghana amid the violence.

He told AFP that Ouattara’s efforts to ease the country’s still fierce political rivalries were superficial.

“He’s not shown that he’s honest (or) sincere in this dialogue,” said the staunch supporter of the Ivorian Popular Front (FPI), Gbagbo’s party.

“We want all the political prisoners to be released,” Adia Pickass said, adding this would be a key step in Ouattara proving his sincerity.

Several top Gbagbo aides and FPI heavyweights remain behind bars.

Adia Pickass pointed to the arrest last month of FPI youth leader Justin Koua as evidence of the Ouattara government choosing punishment over reconciliation.

“We see a kind of justice of winners,” Adia Pickass said. “It’s only one side that is under judgement.”

Adia Pickass is facing an arrest warrant in Ivory Coast, but said he does not trust the courts there to give him a fair trial.

Adia Pickass, who had been Gbagbo’s representative on the electoral commission through the 2010 polls, is one of several of his loyalists living in exile in neighbouring Ghana.

Another Gbagbo loyalist, Justin Kone Katinan, the ex-president’s spokesman and former budget minister, will learn on August 5 whether he will be extradited from Ghana to Ivory Coast for economic crimes allegedly committed during the post-election crisis.

FPI supporters have repeatedly accused Ouattara of not doing enough to reconcile the rival camps.

Ouattara allies reply that Gbagbo loyalists continue to be involved in sporadic armed attacks across the west African nation and attempts to destabilise the regime.

FPI supporters have also demanded Gbagbo’s release from the International Criminal Court in The Hague, where he is facing crimes against humanity charges over his role in the post-election crisis.

…read more

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Cosafa Cup favourites Zambia begin campaign

Hosts Zambia embark on Sunday on a Cosafa Cup journey they hope will last seven days and finish with a record-equalling fourth title.

They face Mozambique in the second half of a quarter-finals double-header at Nkana Stadium in mining city Kitwe.

Surprise qualifiers Lesotho, who topped a qualifying group ahead of Botswana and Kenya, meet Angola in the other match.

Chipolopolo (Copper Bullets) won the first two editions of the 16-year southern Africa national team championship.

They were successful again in 2006, but the closest they came to glory since was collecting silver medals twice.

Although France-born coach Herve Renard has chosen an experimental squad, his side are favoured to lift the trophy.

And he accepts the pressure is on him and his team as they try and put a miserable year for the Copper Bullets behind them.

“Every Zambian believes we will win the Cosafa Cup this year, especially as we are hosting the tournament,” admitted Renard.

“This means there is only one path for us to follow — the one that leads to the winners’ podium in Ndola next Saturday.”

Renard became a national hero in Zambia last year when his team emerged as shock winners of the 2012 Africa Cup of Nations.

After 120 goalless minutes against Didier Drogba-skippered Ivory Coast, the underdogs won a penalty shootout in Gabon.

But little has gone right for Zambia since with a disappointing Africa Cup title defence followed by poor World Cup qualifying results.

They failed to win at the 2013 Nations Cup in South Africa, drawing with Ethiopia, Nigeria and Burkina Faso and making a first-round exit.

And draws with minnows Lesotho and Sudan have left dreams of a first World Cup appearance on the verge of extinction.

Renard hopes goalkeeper Danny Munyau, defender Kondwani Mtonga and midfielder Mukuka Mulenga can lead by example in Kitwe.

The local stars were promoted to the first team for recent World Cup ties and offer experience amid exciting but untested talent.

Mozambique coach Joao Chissano has been in charge less than a month since German Gert Engels paid the price for a 6-1 World Cup drubbing in Guinea.

His Cosafa Cup build-up has been nightmarish with a spate of withdrawals owing to injuries and club commitments leading to 11 squad changes.

Almiro Lobo and Dario Khan are long-serving defenders and Alberto Diogo is a midfielder with a fondness for goals.

Striker Josimar Machaisse gave Chissano a timely boost by scoring in a 1-0 friendly victory away to Malawi last weekend.

Lesotho held Kenya 2-2 and Botswana 3-3 before defeating Swaziland 2-0 to top Group B on goal difference and book an unexpected last-eight place.

The Botswana clash stamped Likuena (Crocodiles) as a team to watch when they came from behind twice to level deep in stoppage time.

Angola dare not concede any penalties as midfielder Ralekoti Mokhahlane has proven his worth by converting two spot kicks.

Striker Thapelo Tale has also netted twice and defender Nkau Lerotholi and strikers Mojela Letsie and Tsepo Seturumane once each.

A team averaging 2.3 goals a game and full of never-say-die spirit could trouble Angola, even though they are 65 …read more

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Ivory Coast local polls boycotted by opposition

Voters in Ivory Coast went to the polls Sunday for local elections that were boycotted by the opposition party of former President Laurent Gbagbo, highlighting slow progress on reconciliation following deadly postelection conflict two years ago.

The elections for municipal and regional positions are the first government-organized polls since a decade-long political crisis that culminated in five months of postelection violence in late 2010 and early 2011.

President Alassane Ouattara‘s government failed to convince Gbagbo’s Ivorian Popular Front political party to take part in the vote earlier this year.

Turnout appeared to be low in both government and opposition strongholds of the commercial capital of Abidjan. But Ouattara said he was confident turnout would increase throughout the day.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/UxkLCI919vk/

Ivory Coast president can rule by decree

An Ivory Coast legislative official said Wednesday that lawmakers had given President Alassane Ouattara the authority to rule by decree on social and economic issues for 2013.

Daouda Maiga, a member of the National Assembly‘s communications staff, said an overwhelming majority of the 178 lawmakers present voted in favor of the measure Wednesday. He said four voted against and one abstained.

Maiga added that Ouattara’s decrees will still need to be reviewed and approved by lawmakers later in the year.

Ouattara’s governing coalition has a majority in the 255-seat parliament.

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Ivory Coast begins exhuming dozens of mass graves

Ivory Coast officials on Thursday began exhuming dozens of mass graves dating back to the country’s 2011 postelection violence, as a new report accused President Alassane Ouattara of failing to bring his supporters to justice for crimes they allegedly committed during the conflict.

Justice Minister Gnenema Coulibaly presided over the exhumations, observing a moment of silence at the site before digging started at the first grave on the grounds of a mosque in Abidjan’s Yopougon district.

The grave contained the bodies of four men aged 17 to 35 who were killed at the height of the violence in April 2011 while defending the mosque against militant supporters of former President Laurent Gbagbo.

More than 3,000 people died over a period of five months after Gbagbo refused to concede defeat to Ouattara in the November 2010 election.

Addressing religious leaders as well as relatives of the men who died at the mosque, Coulibaly said “the prevailing security situation” during the conflict made proper funerals impossible for many families, meaning bodies were hastily buried in public places throughout the country, including at places of worship.

A government census identified 57 graves for exhumation in Abidjan alone, many of which contain multiple bodies. The graves together are believed to contain more than 400 bodies. The exhumation process will eventually extend throughout the country, Coulibaly said.

Yopougon was a flashpoint during the violence, and Coulibly said 36 of the 57 graves identified in Abidjan were located in the district. The violence continued in Yopougon for weeks after Gbagbo was arrested from a bunker following military intervention by France and the United Nations.

Coulibaly said the exhumations would provide closure to victims’ families while offering valuable information that would help bring perpetrators of crimes to justice.

But in a report released Thursday, Human Rights Watch faulted judicial officials for failing to come up with a strategy to investigate grave crimes committed during the conflict

Fighters on both sides committed atrocities, including the extrajudicial killings of hundreds, a national commission of inquiry reported last August. But Human Rights Watch said that while more than 150 supporters of former President Laurent Gbagbo have been charged in connection with the postelection violence, no Ouattara loyalists have been charged, fueling allegations of “victor’s justice.”

A “Special Investigative Cell” formed to undertake criminal investigations appears to be understaffed, and its authority has been called into question when it has attempted to probe crimes committed outside Abidjan, the report said.

Ouattara’s repeated promises to hold all perpetrators of grave crimes to account “are starting to ring hollow,” said the rights group’s U.N. director Philippe Bolopion.

“Our fear is that if impunity continues, the cycle of violence in Ivory Coast will not really be broken,” he said. “And sadly we will not be surprised if in a few years from now we see another cycle of violence, with the same perpetrators in position to commit the same types of crimes.”

Ouattara defends his record. He said significant progress had been made in promoting equal justice, speaking on the BBC’s “HARDtalk” program that first aired March …read more

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Ivory Coast not ensuring balanced justice: report

A human rights group charges that Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara’s government is not arresting his supporters suspected of crimes during the country’s 2010-11 postelection conflict, increasing the danger of future violence.

Human Rights Watch said Thursday that the West African country’s judiciary does not have a strategy for investigating crimes in which 3,000 people were killed over five months.

The violence erupted after the November 2010 presidential runoff vote when former President Laurent Gbagbo refused to concede to Ouattara. A national commission found that fighters on both sides committed atrocities.

The report says that more than 150 supporters of former President Laurent Gbagbo have been charged in connection with the postelection violence but no Ouattara loyalists have been charged, fueling allegations that the president is engaging in “victor’s justice.”

…read more

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Ivory Coast to exhume mass graves from conflict

An Ivory Coast justice official says that exhumations of mass graves from the country’s 2010-11 postelection violence will begin next week.

Justice Ministry communications chief Soriba Kone said Thursday that the exhumations would begin in Abidjan and eventually reach the entire country. He could not provide a timeline or say how many graves needed to be exhumed.

More than 3,000 people died during a five-month power struggle after ex-President Laurent Gbagbo refused to concede defeat in the November 2010 vote.

Kone also said the investigations would also extend to 12 mass graves believed to be related to a July 2012 attack on a camp for displaced people in western Ivory Coast.

…read more
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A look at different versions of Kercher's death

British exchange student Meredith Kercher, 21, was found dead, half-naked and in a pool of blood in the apartment she shared with Amanda Knox and two Italian roommates in the Italian university town of Perugia on Nov. 2, 2007. She died of a stab wound to the neck.

A Perugia court convicted Knox and her ex-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito of Kercher’s murder on Dec. 4, 2009, and sentenced Knox to 26 years and Sollecito to 25 years. An appellate court overturned their convictions on Oct. 3, 2011, and Knox returned to Seattle a free woman.

On Tuesday, Italy‘s high court ordered a new trial for Knox and Sollecito, overturning their acquittals.

Here’s a look at the various versions of events the night of Nov. 1, 2007 in Perugia.

PROSECUTORS:

Italian prosecutors allege that Knox and Sollecito, then 20 and 23, killed Kercher in a drug-fueled sex assault involving a third man, Rudy Guede of the Ivory Coast. They maintained the murder weapon was a large knife taken from Sollecito’s house and found there by investigators. Prosecutors said the knife matched the wounds on Kercher’s body and had traces of Kercher’s DNA on the blade and Knox’s DNA on the handle. The prosecutors depicted Knox as a sex-obsessed, manipulative “she-devil.”

DEFENSE LAWYERS:

Her defenders portrayed Knox as an innocent girl caught up in an Italian judicial nightmare, brow-beaten into saying things she didn’t mean during a 14-hour interrogation by dozens of police. They claimed inept Italian police contaminated the Kercher crime scene and produced DNA evidence that was not scientifically sound.

APPELLATE COURT RULING:

The appeals court that acquitted Knox and Sollecito in 2011 said there was no murder weapon and determined that the DNA evidence used to convict them was faulty. It also poked holes in the motive described by prosecutors. The court said the lower trial court failed to prove the two were in the house when Kercher was killed and that the guilty verdict wasn’t corroborated by any evidence, but rather based on an improbable scenario: “The sudden choice of two young people, good and open to other people, to do evil for evil’s sake, just like that, without another reason.”

The three-judge panel stopped short …read more
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UN: Border violence halts Ivorian refugee return

U.N. officials in Liberia say they’ve temporarily halted the repatriation of tens of thousands of refugees from Ivory Coast because of continued unrest near the border between the two countries.

Robert Tibagwa of the U.N. refugee agency told The Associated Press on Tuesday that a convoy of people returning to Ivory Coast had to come back because of the security situation there. More than 150,000 Ivorians fled to Liberia in the wake of the country’s post-election violence in 2010, and more than 60,000 are still in Liberia.

After the conflict, many fighters who supported ex-Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo fled into neighboring Liberia, where they are believed to have launched a series of deadly cross-border attacks.

One attack in June 2012 killed seven U.N. peacekeepers and 10 civilians.

…read more
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Notorious Ivory Coast militia leader killed

A regional official says a notorious militia leader accused of enlisting child soldiers for cross-border raids from Liberia into western Ivory Coast was killed during fighting Saturday.

Claude Koffi Yao Kan, sub-prefect for the western town of Blolequin, said Sunday that Oulaï Tako, known as “Tarzan of the West,” was among three assailants killed by soldiers responding to the attack. Ivory Coast‘s United Nations mission says two civilians and a traditional hunter were also killed in the attack on a village 15 miles (25 kilometers) outside Blolequin.

A report last year from Human Rights Watch implicated Tako in a series of raids on villages in western Ivory Coast dating back to July 2011, with witnesses saying he had been involved in the recruitment and training of child soldiers.

…read more
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Gunmen attack west Ivory Coast village, 2 killed

An Ivory Coast military spokesman says gunmen attacked a village in the country’s west, setting it ablaze and killing at least two people.

Kouassi Kakao, chief of communications for the military chief of staff, said casualty information on the attack in Petit Guiglo, located 25 kilometers (15 miles) southwest of Blolequin, was still preliminary. He said he could not specify whether the two fatalities were civilians, soldiers or assailants.

The attack is the third in less than two weeks in Ivory Coast‘s western region, where some of the worst atrocities were committed during the country’s 2010-11 postelection conflict.

An internal security notice from the United Nations peacekeeping mission said the attack began at 6 a.m. and ended around noon, and that casualty totals were still unknown.

…read more
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Would-be Chicago bomber apologizes in letter

A young Lebanese immigrant awaiting sentencing for placing a backpack he thought held a bomb near Chicago’s Wrigley Field wrote a letter to the judge saying he drank “all day, every day” for months before the would-be attack.

In a seven page letter to U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman, Sami Samir Hassoun apologizes and insists he has worked hard at becoming a better person, including by taking yoga instruction in jail.

The letter was included in a defense filing this week. Hassoun, in custody since his 2010 arrest, is scheduled to be sentenced April 5.

Prosecutors want a 30-year prison sentence for the 25-year-old, who pleaded guilty to weapons charges last year. The defense filing argues Hassoun deserves no more than 20 years, in part because they contend he was egged on by an FBI informant to concoct the bombing scheme.

In his plea agreement, Hassoun admitted he dropped what he believed was a bomb into a trash bin on a crowded street by the Chicago Cubs‘ stadium in 2010. The fake device was given to him by undercover FBI agents who had been tipped off by the informant.

In the letter — dated Oct. 12, 2012, but released publicly this week — Hassoun tells Gettleman, “I am so ashamed of my actions and of this horrific crime that I’ve committed.”

He describes feeling despondent and confused with his new life as a bakery worker, frustrated by broken dreams of becoming rich after he and his parents moved to the U.S. from Lebanon in 2008.

“By two to three months before my crime, I was drinking all day, every day,” he wrote. “I would open a bottle of Johnnie Walker Black in the morning and finish it by evening, while also drinking vodka and beer.”

He smoked marijuana regularly and sometimes used cocaine and ecstasy, he wrote.

Hassoun said he has confronted his self-destructiveness, has taken anger-management courses and is working toward a degree through a University of Ohio program designed for inmates.

Hassoun, who was born in Beruit, blamed what he described as longstanding emotional issues, in part, on trauma that lingered with him since childhood living in Ivory Coast when bloody civil strife broke out …read more
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Surviving a surge in street violence in Venezuela

On their daily cable car rides to and from home in Venezuela‘s capital, Maria Gonzalez and Jose Rafael Suarez soar in a bubble of safety far above the deadly, trash-strewn streets below.

Untouchable for 17 minutes, they peer at the expanse of dank, narrow alleys and the zinc roofs of shanties, some built four stories tall. Stray bullets and thugs on motorcycles fly through the streets, and people scurry home as soon as night falls.

“There are a lot of kids in the street using drugs, with guns,” said Gonzalez while riding the newly inaugurated cable car one afternoon to the plastics factory where she and Suarez work.

Her 27-year-old friend gazed down at the sea of slum roofs.

“It’s very hard to change all this,” he said.

That frustration defines this 28-million-person country, which has seen shootings, kidnappings and other crime infiltrate every aspect of daily life. Whole neighborhoods that used to buzz with street life are abandoned at night, while foreign diplomats and working-class Venezuelans alike fall prey to so-called express kidnappings that whisk victims away to the nearest cash machines.

Amid a list of woes, including double-digit inflation and crumbling infrastructure, rampant crime is seen by many as the main failing of the late President Hugo Chavez‘s government, and one that a whole swath of this shell-shocked country has lost hope of correcting.

Just last week, the U.N. Development Program found that Venezuela suffered the world’s fifth highest homicide rate, with 45 out of every 100,000 people killed in 2010, trailing only Honduras, El Salvador, the Ivory Coast and Jamaica. The nonprofit Venezuelan Violence Observatory estimates the homicide rate was much higher last year, at 73 per 100,000 people.

That murder rate has doubled since 1999, when Chavez was first elected president, officials say. And kidnappings increased 26-fold from 1999 to 2011, according to a study by the civic group Active Peace, which studies safety issues.

The government not only can’t rein in the problem, it won’t even say how bad it is. Officials stopped releasing official crime statistics in 2005, leaving it to nonprofit groups to sort through the casualties.

“I calculate that 20 to 25 years back, we had a problem that was moderate to …read more
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Arms transfers fuel instability in Ivory Coast

A new report from Amnesty International says arms transfers that played a pivotal role in Ivory Coast‘s decade-long political crisis continue to fuel instability and human rights abuses.

The report documents transfers involving states and arms traffickers both before and after the United Nations Security Council placed the West African nation under an arms embargo in November 2004.

Ivory Coast was rocked by months of postelection violence after former President Laurent Gbagbo refused to step down despite having lost the November 2010 election to now-President Alassane Ouattara. Amnesty said all parties to the conflict benefited from reckless and illegal arms transfers.

The report is timed to coincide with the final U.N. conference on the Arms Trade Treaty, which opened Monday.

…read more
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7 killed in attack in Ivory Coast

A regional official in western Ivory Coast says seven people have been killed after gunmen from neighboring Liberia crossed the river separating the two countries and attacked a village.

Blolequin Prefect Kouakou Yao Dinard said Thursday four civilians, two Ivorian soldiers and one of the assailants were killed in the clashes in Zelebly. Dinard said the attack began at 4 a.m. Tuesday and lasted many hours. Villagers in all the surrounding localities fled their homes as a result.

Western Ivory Coast was one of the epicenters of the country’s postelection conflict in 2011. Militias loyal to the nation’s former president took cover across the border in Liberia, and have launched repeated attacks across the porous frontier, demarcated by the Cavally River.

…read more
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2 years after Duekoue, militia leader still free

His fighters are accused of carrying out the worst massacre perpetrated during Ivory Coast‘s bloody, post-election conflict two years ago. Despite repeated vows from the government to force them out, they continue to illegally occupy a national park.

And when their leader, Amade Oueremi, travels through this western town, he hardly behaves like a man on the lam, cruising through in a conspicuous motorcade of dozens of cars and motorcycles, local officials say.

“It’s a big mystery to us, because he’s escorted around here like he’s a military leader, or a chief,” said Denis Badouon, an assistant to the mayor. “We don’t understand it.”

It has been nearly two years since the power struggle between former President Laurent Gbagbo and his successor, Alassane Ouattara, came to an end. The fighting, which began after Gbagbo refused to leave office despite having lost the November 2010 presidential runoff vote, claimed more than 3,000 lives over five months, according to the United Nations.

Since becoming president, Ouattara has tried to bridge lingering divisions. But the continued impunity for Oueremi, who joined pro-Ouattara forces during the conflict, is a prominent example of what rights groups describe as a barrier to reconciliation: The president’s unwillingness — or perhaps inability — to prosecute allies who have been implicated in grave abuses. Though crimes have been documented on both sides, only Gbagbo allies have been charged.

“For us the issue is simple. Amade has been cited as one of the violators of human rights during the post-election crisis and he needs to be arrested,” said Sindou Bamba, the head of a coalition of human rights groups that has documented abuses committed by Oueremi’s men. “Not only that, but he is occupying this land illegally. Land is one of the drivers of conflict in Ivory Coast. So we need to use all peaceful means to resolve this case.”

By the middle of March 2011, the postelection conflict was heading toward its violent conclusion, and residents recall how Oueremi’s fighters were a prominent armed presence in this region of fertile red earth, covered in cocoa plantations. On March 25, the chief of a village roughly 30 kilometers (18 miles) north of Duekoue was detained by Oueremi’s fighters and taken to a nearby checkpoint, where the fighters stripped him and threatened to beat him. When Oueremi himself arrived, he accused the village chief of sending information about the fighters’ whereabouts to their pro-Gbagbo opponents.

“I …read more
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Ivory Coast troubled by one-sided justice

One day in late March 2011, at the height of Ivory Coast‘s postelection violence, a 23-year-old cocoa farmer was shot in the back by unknown gunmen and left for dead on the outskirts of Niambly, a village of 400 mud-brick houses three kilometers outside the western town of Duekoue.

In response, the village’s roughly 3,000 residents decided it was no longer safe and began to flee. According to village chief Gabriel Tahe, nearly all of them ended up in Duekoue’s Carrefour neighborhood, inhabited mainly by fellow members of the Guere ethnic group.

With this move, Niambly’s residents unwittingly placed themselves at the center of the deadliest episode of the conflict, which erupted after former President Laurent Gbagbo refused to step down despite losing the November 2010 runoff vote to current President Alassane Ouattara.

Days later, on March 29, pro-Ouattara fighters including soldiers, militiamen and traditional hunters tore through Carrefour, killing hundreds. Many of the victims were men from the Guere ethnic group, which largely supported Gbagbo in the disputed vote. At least 30 were confirmed Niambly residents, said Chief Tahe.

The trouble for Niambly did not stop there. After the conflict ended and Ouattara took office in May 2011, 800 residents of the village were settled in a United Nations-guarded camp for people displaced by the fighting. In an attack last July that underscored persistent tensions in the region, the camp was overrun by a mob assisted by traditional hunters, known as dozos, and soldiers from Ouattara’s army, the Republican Forces of Ivory Coast. Nearly the entire camp was burned to the ground and at least eight people were killed, including two from Niambly, according to Chief Tahe. Rights groups suspect the total was higher.

Today, around two-thirds of Niambly’s residents have returned to the village, rebuilding homes that were still salvageable after the fighting ended; some homes remain little more than rubble. But while many residents said they were ready to move on from the conflict, which claimed more than 3,000 lives nationwide, they described lingering fears about the pro-Ouattara forces that took part in the attacks against them.

The violence inflicted on Niambly residents, apparently with impunity, shows the problem of one-sided justice that is troubling Ivory Coast. Two years after the postelection violence, only supporters of former president Gbagbo have been charged for crimes, although it is widely acknowledged that abuses were committed on both sides. The Ivorian judiciary has charged and detained 55 Gbagbo loyalists for violent crimes.

…read more
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Amnesty criticizes Ivory Coast for biased justice

Amnesty International has accused Ivory Coast‘s government of subjecting supporters of former President Laurent Gbagbo to torture, ill-treatment and biased legal proceedings.

In a report released Tuesday Amnesty condemns the security forces’ response to a wave of attacks on military installations that began last August. It says Gbagbo loyalists detained in the ensuing crackdown have been beaten and given electric shocks.

Gbagbo’s refusal to leave office after losing the November 2010 election to current President Alassane Ouattara sparked five months of violence which killed more than 3,000 people.

Amnesty criticizes the Ouattara government for only arresting Gbagbo supporters for the postelection violence. It also warns of rampant insecurity in western Ivory Coast.

Ivorian officials have vowed to bring to justice all perpetrators of abuses during and after the conflict.

…read more
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Laurent Gbagbo defense says he is a scapegoat

A lawyer for former Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo has told International Criminal Court judges that prosecutors are making him a “scapegoat” for deadly violence that erupted after 2010 elections.

Gbagbo lawyer Emmanuel Altit claimed at a crucial pretrial hearing Wednesday prosecutors are focused solely on one side of the post-election violence and ignoring the role of his rival, current President Alassane Ouattara.

Altit’s claim reflects concerns voiced by human rights groups that the fact the court has only publicly indicted Gbagbo and his wife could fuel a perception that the court is meting out victor’s justice.

Prosecutors say they are conducting an impartial investigation of both sides of the conflict that left some 3,000 people dead and shattered Ivory Coast‘s reputation as a beacon of democracy in West Africa.

…read more
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Guinean troops take Ivory Coast village: Official

An Ivory Coast military spokesman says that Guinean soldiers have occupied a border village in western Ivorian territory.

Col. Cherif Moussa said Tuesday that the seizure of Kpeaba village was part of a territorial dispute between the two countries dating back to Ivory Coast‘s independence in 1960.

He said the village had been occupied since the beginning of February.

Moussa said Ivory Coast has soldiers positioned five kilometers (3 miles) from Kpeaba but said that “diplomacy will play its role” in resolving the dispute.

…read more
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