|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
US and French troops help force Côte DIvoire cease-fire
By Chris Talbot
5 October 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Anti-government forces met Thursday with Côte DIvoire/Ivory
Coast officials to agree a cease-fire after weeks of fighting
that began on September 19.
The cease-fire was drawn up by mediators from neighbouring
West African countries, but came after US and French troops were
sent to the region. Commentators are still sceptical of the possibility
of long-term stability. A BBC correspondent stated that the government
is preparing for an offensive at the same time as signing the
truce.
About 200 US troops, said to be mainly special forces, were
sent from Germany into the West African country of Côte
DIvoire last week following a coup attempt. France also
sent up to 200 soldiers, including paratroopers, on top of the
600 already stationed in the country. A small team of British
military experts were also sent in. Deploying armoured vehicles
and helicopters, the French troops evacuated over 2,000 people,
mainly Europeans and Americans, who were trapped in the northern
cities of Bouaké and Korhogo by rebel troops.
Hundreds of dissident soldiers had attempted to take over the
commercial capital Abidjan but were repelled by troops loyal to
President Laurent Gbagbo. The rebels, most of whom were recently
dismissed from the army because of their alleged support for General
Robert Guei, took refuge in the two northern cities and surrounding
areas.
Guei, who was executed by pro-government paramilitaries when
the fighting began in Abidjan, took control of Côte DIvoire
in a 1999 Christmas Eve coup. Prior to that the country was ruled
by the Côte DIvoire Democratic Party (PDCI) since
independence from France in 1960, and was regarded as one of the
most stable in West Africa. General Guei, whose base was mainly
in the army, became increasingly unpopular in the country and
was also opposed by France, which retains its dominant financial
and political interests in Côte DIvoire. He was replaced
by Gbagbo after electionswidely seen as flawedtook
place in October 2000.
The US forces stationed themselves at the airport in Yamoussoukro,
the capital of Côte DIvoire. They helped airlift the
civilians rescued by the French troops into neighbouring Ghana.
Although most of the Westerners living in the northern region
have been moved to safety, it seems likely that the American troops
will remain. Richard Boucher of the US State Department said that
US troops were collaborating with the French to ensure the
safety of as many people as possible. When asked whether
after airlifting US civilians and others out of the country they
would then leave, Boucher replied: Im not going to
talk about where the military may or may not move.
France has officially stated it will maintain its troops in
the country, providing a backup to government forces. It has apparently
decided against a larger-scale military commitment, even though
the Côte DIvoire government attempted to call on a
defence pact it has signed with France for military aid in case
of an outside invasion. France refused to take seriously the claims
made by Gbagbo that the rebel forces are backed by neighbouring
Burkina Faso.
The US and France are working directly with the Economic Community
of West African States (Ecowas), leaders of whose 15 member states
held an emergency meeting on September 29 that was also attended
by President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa representing the African
Union (formerly the Organisation for African Unity). President
Abdoulaye Wade of Senegal threatened if negotiations were not
successful a 4,000-strong force made up of West African troops
in Ecomog, the military wing of Ecowas, would be sent in.
Given the acute economic decline of Côte DIvoireit
is still the biggest cocoa producer in the world, but cocoa prices
fell throughout the 1990s forcing the country deeply into debtunemployed
soldiers could easily form the basis of rebel armies as they have
in neighbouring Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. War still continues
in Liberia as the Guinean-backed Liberians United for Reconciliation
and Democracy (LURD) attempts to overthrow the repressive regime
of Charles Taylor. In Sierra Leone a shaky peace agreement between
rebel forces and a corrupt regime only continues because of occupying
British troops and a large United Nations peacekeeping force.
It is not just Côte DIvoires importance as
a cocoa producer that motivates US involvement. Fully 15 percent
of US oil supplies now come from West Africa, and the strategic
importance of the region will grow if the Middle East is engulfed
in war. President George Bush held special meetings outside the
UN meeting last week with African leaders from countries either
producing oil or where oil exploration is under way. These included
Cameroon, Chad, Republic of Congo (Congo Brazzaville), Gabon,
Equatorial Guinea and Sao Tomé and Principe. The latter
is a tiny island country where vast undersea oil deposits have
been discovered and it is suggested that it will be a new US military
base in the Gulf of Guinea.
Potential for conflict within Côte DIvoire has
increased over the last period as the ruling elite has stoked
up ethnic and religious divisions within the country to maintain
its grip on power. Opposition to northernerspredominantly
Muslim as opposed to the Christian southhas been fuelled
by the fact that up to a third of the population are immigrants,
mainly from Burkina Faso. Immigrant workers came into the country
to work on the cocoa plantations, attracteduntil the last
few yearsby the relative economic prosperity.
Gbagbo, leader of the Ivorian Popular Front (FPI)allied
to the Socialist Party in Francecame to power in elections
where his main opponent, Alassane Outtara of the Rally of Republicans
(RDR), was banned from standing and RDR supporters boycotted the
elections. Outtara was deemed not eligible to stand because his
family is said to originate in Burkina Faso. His power base is
in the Muslim north, and after taking power Gbagbos FPI
was heavily implicated in pogroms against RDR supporters, mainly
northern Muslim immigrants. In 2001 a US State Department report
stated that security forces in Côte DIvoire were committing
violations with impunity and that murder, arbitrary
and illegal detention, harassment of refugees, torture and extortion
are increasing.
There have also been widespread accusations from NGOs (non-governmental
organisations) that child labour is widely used on the cocoa farms.
A survey conducted by the International Institute for Tropical
Agriculture found that 284,000 children were working in
hazardous conditions on cocoa farms in Côte DIvoire
and other West African countries.
Under pressure from France, towards the end of last year Gbagbo
instituted a Reconciliation Forum and began to mend
fences with the other three main political leaders in the countryOuttara,
Guei and Henri Konan Bedie, the PDCI leader who was president
before the 1999 coup. This year Gbagbo was able to win support
from the International Monetary Fund, which had frozen lending
three years ago, and began renegotiating the countrys debt
with western banks.
Poverty and unemployment are widespread and there are clearly
fears that the rebel soldiers could gain popular support against
the Gbagbo regime, especially in the north. As well as blaming
Burkina Faso for the army revolt, government supporters attacked
Outtaras house in Abidjan and he was forced to take refuge
in the French embassy.
Whilst many of the rebel soldiers were apparently brought into
the army by Gueithe reason for their dismissalthere
is no evidence that they are politically connected to either Guei
or Outtara. Interviewed by the BBC their spokesman said they were
fighting because the current regime is a dictatorship hiding
under the guise of democracy, that the army used us
for three years and now they want to sack us and that we
have been used like slaves.
See Also:
Côte dIvoire:
President Gbagbo stokes up ethnic conflict
[15 December 2000]
Blairs neocolonialist
vision for Africa
[16 February 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |