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Africa
Police murder French journalist in Ivory Coast
By John Farmer
29 October 2003
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The West African country Ivory Coast was taken nearer to the
resumption of civil war when on October 21 Radio France Internationals
(RFIs) veteran African correspondent, Jean Helene, was shot
dead. A police sergeant shot Helene while he was waiting outside
police headquarters to interview opposition politicians being
released after four days of incarceration. The policeman was disarmed
by his fellow officers, arrested and charged with murder.
France has 3,800 military personnel in the Ivory Coast, and
alongside them are approximately 1,200 West African Ecowas troops
enforcing a United Nations-backed peace agreement brokered in
France in January. The agreement formed the basis for a coalition
government established in office in April that came apart in September
when ministers representing the rebel groups walked out.
Ivory Coast is divided into a mainly Muslim northern region
controlled by the rebels and a predominantly Christian south controlled
by forces loyal to President Laurent Gbagbo, with French and Ecowas
troops patrolling the border between them. Everything points to
the journalists murder being carried out on behalf of Gbagbo
supporters determined to obstruct the French plan.
According to the Media Foundation of West Africa, Jean Helene
was killed by police sergeant Dago Cyrille Theodore of the VIP
security unit (BSP). Helene was waiting in his vehicle when the
police officer confronted him and asked him for his identity and
purpose. The officer went into the headquarters and spoke with
the director of the General Intelligence Unit, Commissioner Djable,
who confirmed Helenes identity. Then, according to eyewitnesses,
the police officer returned and shot the correspondent with his
AK-47 rifle. In another report, Helene was shot twice in the head
after being hit in the stomach with a rifle butt.
Helene was to interview 11 active members of the opposition
party Rally of the Republicans (RDR), led by northern politician
Alassane Ouattara. The RDR members had been detained for an alleged
conspiracy to assassinate members of Gbagbos rump government.
The director of information of RFI, Jerome Bouvier, quoted
in Le Monde, called for an independent inquiry: We
will go to Abidjan to request from the authorities all the explanations
necessary on the death of our fellow member and friend. It is
a man who acted under authority that perpetrated this assassination.
The press watchdog Reporters Sans Frontieres condemned the
killing, criticised the recent erosion of press freedom in the
country and demanded a full inquiry. RSF recently issued its report
naming Ivory Coast as one of the three fastest-declining countries
in regard to press freedom, now lying 137 out of 166 countries.
Gbagbo immediately sacked General Adolphe Baby, director general
of the National Police. The security minister in the rump government,
Martin Bleou, was quick to deny that the officer responsible for
the killing was acting under orders. Gbagbo expressed regret at
the killing but declared, This is war and in wartime people
get passionate. He would not give a commitment for the safety
of international journalists.
The killing of Helene ties in with the campaign of Gbagbo supporters
to suppress hostile media reporting. Earlier this month, the owner
of Le National, the main pro-government newspaper, called
for the boycott of several newspapers aligned with opposition
political parties. The campaign was supported by militia-style
youth groups known as the Young Patriots, said to
have about 20,000 members throughout the south. These groups conduct
military-style training and claim to have access to arms. They
carry out attacks on immigrants originating from Burkina Faso
and Mali, and promote Ivorian nationalism. Charles Ble Goude,
head of one of the three factions in the Young Patriots, leads
the youth movement of Gbagbos party, the Ivorian Popular
Front (FPI), and is often seen in public with police bodyguards.
Earlier this month, the youth groups attacked French-owned
water, electricity and mobile phone companies in the capital,
Abidjan, and organised demonstrations against the peace agreement,
demanding that the rebels be disarmed. Under pressure from France,
the government has now banned demonstrations for three months
and ordered the disbanding of one of the three youth groups said
to have caused damage to French-owned property.
French president Jacques Chirac, who embarked on a four-day
visit to Niger and Mali on October 22, the day after the assassination,
deplored the killing and demanded the Ivorian authorities shed
all possible light on this murder. Three days later, Chiracs
attitude appeared to have hardened. He said, I call very
firmly...on the Ivorian authorities to come to their senses and
first put an end to these hotbeds of hatred and aggression.
He also condemned the irrational and irresponsible behaviour
of certain Ivorian leaders.
France is clearly running out of patience with the clique around
Gbagbo that has continued to obstruct the setting up of the coalition
government. Helenes murder occurred just as they appear
to be on the point of persuading the rebels to return to the coalition
government. Frances problem is that the southern elite supports
Gbagbos anti-northern chauvinism and resents any encroachment
on their control of the cocoa-producing southern region.
When the three rebel groups, now known as the New Force, withdrew
their nine ministers from the coalition government, they insisted
it was because Gbagbo had not delegated to them powers agreed
at the January peace agreement. Gbagbos response to the
withdrawal was broadcast on television. He said that the nine
rebel ministers would not be missed and compared them to houseboys
living in their masters house and abusing his property.
Ghanaian president John Koufor, currently chairmen of Ecowas,
had instigated diplomatic efforts to get the peace process back
on the road just before the arrests of the RDR members. Gbagbo
had flown to Ghana to have talks with Koufor and then onto Abuja
to meet Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo. Rebel spokesman
Amadou Kone told the IRIN news agency that they received several
diplomatic overtures urging them to heal the rift with Gbagbo
and were responding positively. Kone said, We have received
several invitations, which we are going to accept because we are
open to discussion about resuming our place in the government
of reconciliation.
French diplomats said that the rebels were simply making a
political point, that they wanted the West to press Gbagbo to
give the coalition government more authority. They also wanted
to put more pressure on donors to provide more generous support
for rebel fighters when they put down their guns. One senior French
military observer, referring to the rebels, said, I think
they are on the hook. I cannot see them leaving [the coalition].
I would be surprised if they do.
The Bush administration has also strongly criticised the Ivorian
government for shutting down a US-owned cellular telephone company,
Western Wireless International, earlier this month. Apparently,
the company offices were seized by an Alexander Galley, who claims
to own the company, with the support of 25 policemen. US authorities
describe Galley as a criminal with connections to former Liberian
president Charles Taylor. The Ivory Coast government says it has
never expropriated a foreign company and that it deplores
the incident, but the president of Western Wireless holds
Gbagbos regime responsible.
See Also:
America blocks UN operation
in Ivory Coast conflict
[9 May 2003]
UN and US back French intervention
in Ivory Coast
[12 February 2003]
France goes on the offensive
in Ivory Coast
[7 January 2003]
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