IVORY COAST: Residents of Abobo flee after days of clashes as post-election violence continues
Record ID:
181842
IVORY COAST: Residents of Abobo flee after days of clashes as post-election violence continues
- Title: IVORY COAST: Residents of Abobo flee after days of clashes as post-election violence continues
- Date: 25th February 2011
- Summary: ABIDJAN, IVORY COAST (FEBRUARY 24, 2011) (REUTERS) VARIOUS OF PEOPLE WALKING CARRYING BELONGINGS ON HEAD BOYS WALKING FOLLOWED BY MOTHER PEOPLE IN LINE WALKING WITH BAGS ON HEADS
- Embargoed: 12th March 2011 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Cote d'Ivoire
- Country: Ivory Coast
- Topics: War / Fighting,Domestic Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA9BIBYFVM22JG9RR1WYJ6RHC4N
- Story Text: Terrified residents fled sporadic shooting in an Abidjan neighbourhood on Thursday (February 24) and fighting erupted in Ivory Coast's west in an escalation of a post-poll power struggle that threatens to reignite civil war.
The spread of clashes in the world's top cocoa grower comes amid faltering diplomatic efforts to resolve a dispute between incumbent president Laurent Gbagbo and rival Alassane Ouattara, internationally recognised as the winner of a November election.
Over 300 people have been killed since then and worsening insecurity this week propelled cocoa futures to 30-year highs.
Hearing reports of pro-Gbagbo reinforcements going in, hundreds of residents, with bags piled on their heads, streamed out of Abidjan's Abobo neighbourhood, the scene of two days of fierce clashes between forces loyal to Gbagbo and Ouattara.
People of all ages piled into vehicles leaving the pro-Ouattara neighbourhood, where houses and walls are peppered with small arms fire and, in places, destroyed by heavy weapons.
Gbagbo has rejected calls to step down despite U.N.-certified election results showing that Ouattara won the Nov. 28 poll, which was meant to reunify the country but has instead re-opened bitter divisions from the 2002-3 war.
The economy has ground to a halt as sanctions bite.
Fighting broke out overnight in the west of the country, near the frontline between the two factions as well as the border with Guinea and Liberia, two nations trying to recover from their own instability and conflict.
"(The U.N.) thinks the clash poses a risk of armed conflict restarting ... which would have serious consequences for the Ivorian people and even the sub-region," said Hamadoun Toure, spokesman for the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Ivory Coast.
The New Forces rebels who still control the north and have backed Ouattara said they were attacked by pro-Gbagbo forces.
There was no statement from the army and information on the toll from the clashes was conflicting.
African presidents mandated to resolve the conflict were in Ivory Coast this week and are due to meet again soon in Mauritania to discuss the crisis, but there is little optimism that they will be able to broker a deal.
Clashes erupted in Abidjan as they started to leave town on Tuesday. A military source saying between 10 and 15 Gbagbo loyalists were killed in an ambush on Tuesday alone.
Tension was high on Thursday.
Ouattara is holed up in a hotel protected by U.N. peacekeepers but the rebels who have backed him are believed to have bolstered their presence in Abidjan, raising the stakes in a battle for the country's main commercial city.
West African regional body ECOWAS, which has been much stronger in its support for Ouattara than other parts of the continent, has threatened to oust Gbagbo by force but any such operation is seen as a long way off.
Nigeria's foreign minister told Reuters in an interview on Thursday that any intervention would need to be U.N. led and would be more likely to involve an aerial and naval blockade than deploying troops. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
- Copyright Notice: (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2011. Open For Restrictions - http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp
- Usage Terms/Restrictions: Footage contains identifiable children: users must ensure that they comply with local laws and regulations governing the publishing of this material.