IVORY COAST: Ivory Coast's ruling party warns the war-divided country will descend into chaos if foreign mediators try to strip President Gbagbo of any of his powers
Record ID:
181605
IVORY COAST: Ivory Coast's ruling party warns the war-divided country will descend into chaos if foreign mediators try to strip President Gbagbo of any of his powers
- Title: IVORY COAST: Ivory Coast's ruling party warns the war-divided country will descend into chaos if foreign mediators try to strip President Gbagbo of any of his powers
- Date: 14th October 2006
- Summary: (BN17) ABIDJAN, IVORY COAST (OCTOBER 13, 2006) (REUTERS) EXTERIORS OF HEADQUARTERS OF FPI (FRONT POPULAIRE IVOIRIEN)
- Embargoed: 29th October 2006 12:00
- Keywords:
- Topics: Domestic Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA2NSKALU7KLR3ORP59OMNZ7TR4
- Story Text: Ivory Coast's ruling party warned on Friday (October 13) the war-divided country would descend into chaos if foreign mediators tried to strip President Laurent Gbagbo of any of his powers at a summit next week.
"If we go to Addis Ababa, strip President Gbagbo of his powers and give them to Banny (Interim Prime Minister Charles Konan Banny) or someone else, that means we want chaos for this country because Ivorians will not accept it," Pascal Affi N'Guessan, head of Gbagbo's FPI party, said.
African leaders are due to meet in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa on Tuesday (October 17) to discuss how Ivory Coast should be governed after a 12-month extension to Gbagbo's mandate expires at the end of October.
Leaders from West African regional bloc ECOWAS agreed last week that they would recommend Gbagbo remain in power for a further year but with some of his powers curtailed and transferred to interim prime minister Charles Konan Banny.
The former French colony has been split in two since rebels seized its northern half after a failed attempt to oust Gbagbo in September 2002. United Nations and French peacekeepers police a buffer zone keeping both sides apart.
A U.N.-backed transition plan gave Gbagbo a further 12 months in office when polls failed to take place a year ago.
With history threatening to repeat itself, the rebels and opposition are demanding Gbagbo step down, setting themselves on a collision course with the president's supporters who say he is the lawful leader until a successor is elected.
The rebels have proposed Gbagbo be replaced by a new transition leader and two vice-presidents, one from the rebel ranks and the other from the FPI. A main opposition leader on Thursday (October 12) proposed a ruling council comprised of Gbagbo, two opposition leaders and rebel leader Guillaume Soro.
But N'Guessan said any new proposals for a transition should instead demand the rebels disarm and he repeated the party's call for 4,000 French troops who back up 7,600 U.N. peacekeepers to leave the country. He accuses them of prolonging the crisis.
Gbagbo's supporters have in the past launched violent protests against challenges to the president's authority. Some of the violence has targeted French nationals and French business interests in the world's top cocoa grower. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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