Sunday, December 12, 2010

Ivory Coast Elections Dispute: Outttara Wants Gbagbo Out Before Talks, US Threatens Sanctions

Outtara wants Gbagbo out before talks, U.S threatens sanctions

Monday, 13 December 2010 00:00

By Francis Obinor

News - THE man widely recognised as winner of Cote d’Ivoire’s disputed presidential polls Alassane Outtara has said incumbent Laurent Gbagbo must concede power to allow for talks.

The comment came as United States (U.S.) Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson said America wants the era of bad elections in Africa to end and called on Gbagbo to act like a statesman and hand over power and authority to Ouattara.

In a press conference by telephone with reporters across Africa and made available to The Guardian by the Bureau of International Information Programmes, U.S. Department of State, Carson warned that if that does not happen, the United States will take further steps such as travel bans and sanctions directed against Gbagbo, his family and associates.

He said the United States “has no plans to engage or intervene in any way militarily in Côte d’Ivoire but said Washington hopes that African voices, African pressure, will be sufficient.

“We hope that the AU will do precisely what ECOWAS has done, and that is to suspend a government led by President Gbagbo from participation in its organs. ECOWAS has already said that any government led by President Gbagbo will not be able to participate in ECOWAS. We hope that the AU will make that same kind of pronouncement.”

“It is the determination of the U.S. government to do everything we can to ensure that the votes of all Ivorians are counted and respected and that the legitimately elected president of Côte d’Ivoire, Alassane Ouattara, is allowed to take office … as reflected by the votes,” Carson said.

But the African Union (AU) which has suspended Cote d’Ivoire while Gbagbo stays in office has said it does not favour sanctions for now over the disputed presidential election in and will instead stick to quiet diplomacy.

The Ivoirien people, Carson stressed, “seek democracy, stability, development and economic opportunity. They don’t seek a continued contestation over an election that was clearly won by Alassane Ouattara.”

Gbagbo has said he wants to talk with his rival, Alassane Ouattara but a spokesman for Ouattara said he did not oppose dialogue and no talks could take place until he was recognised as president by everyone.

Gbagbo has been isolated by the international community, including the United States, after refusing to yield the presidency although he had fewer votes than Ouattara in last month's poll.??Both men have taken the oath of office and begun organizing competing governments after the electoral commission declared that Ouattara won the November 28 run-off election by 54.1 per cent to 45.9 per cent.

The election was intended to reunite the world's largest cocoa producer after a civil war in 2002. But the political stalemate has shown no sign of ending soon.

Ouattara has appointed a new prime minister, ex-rebel Guillaume Soro, and has said he will start work in his official office this week. But the building is still under the control of Gbagbo.

Gbagbo has the support of several leading generals and control of state television. One of his key allies also controls the country's constitutional council, which overturned the election results saying large numbers of votes cast in the north, Ouattara's home regions, were fraudulent.

Carson told reporters there is “substantial and undisputed evidence showing that Alassane Ouattara won.” The special U.N. representative in Côte d’Ivoire, Ambassador Y.J. Choi, had all of the results that were posted from the country’s districts, “so he had the exact information … and detailed information on voting across the nation,” Carson said.

“The United Nations, the African Union and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and a number of international organizations observed the elections and said they were ‘free and fair’ and reflected the will of the people,” Carson said.

“There was relatively little violence, and so when the votes came to Abidjan and officials started to say people were unable to cast their ballots because of intimidation and violence, this was wrong - because there was no intimidation or violence and everybody had seen that votes had been cast properly,” he said.

Carson, who has served in Kenya, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Botswana, Mozambique, Nigeria and Tanzania, believes “the era of stealing African elections is over.”“More critically,” Carson added, “was the fact that the numbers were known and they were known by the international community - through the UN - which had a heavy invested stake in this process.”

“We have seen in the case of Côte d’Ivoire the value of international observation and monitoring. We have seen the value of having a third source beyond the two competitors - to be able to certify the legitimacy of elections. We believe and hope that the era of bad elections (is) over. This should not happen. We hope that President Gbagbo will step aside, will do the mature, statesmanlike thing and … hand over power and authority to the person who actually won.”

“I hope that the statements that have been made by ECOWAS two days ago that said very clearly that Alassane Ouattara had won the election and that Gbagbo had lost would be a signal of the views of the region, that it is time for Mr. Gbagbo to leave,” Carson said.

“The U.N. Security Council issued a presidential statement affirming its support for the report made by the special representative, Ambassador Choi. It endorsed the ECOWAS statement and we have also seen equally strong statements coming from leaders in the African Union.”

Carson told reporters the current AU president, Malawian President Bingu wa Mutharika, has stated that he supports the determinations of the United Nations and ECOWAS that Ouattara won.

“I think that if all Africa stands up and puts its political voice and its political weight behind a free and fair election and the outcome that favors Alassane Ouattara, that that will be the kind of momentum that is required,” Carson said.

“If President Gbagbo does not step down, the United States is looking to take further additional steps against him, his family, his wife, his children and his immediate entourage and those individuals who are helping to keep him in power illegally,” he warned. “We will consider travel bans on him and his family and his immediate entourage. We will consider economic sanctions against him and his immediate entourage.”

“We think that the era of stealing African elections is over,” Carson said. “This should be an example for all of Africa that this can no longer be tolerated. Theft of elections should not be a part of the democratic process.”

“West Africa has great promise and great potential,” Carson said. “Just as we have seen the return of democracy after five decades in Guinea-Conakry, we believe that it is time for the people of Côte d’Ivoire after a decade of instability to be allowed to have the democracy that they seek and desire.

“It is time for the leadership to allow the economic growth that has been stalled in Côte d’Ivoire to return,” he said.

1 comment:

Leo said...

I am pleased that you raise this problem, the truth is that Gbagbo won the disputed election, how come accept a false result, the president electoral comity of Cote D'ivoire fail to proclaim the result of the election within the time is was allowed to do so 3 days, and the 4th days he found himself in the Headquarter of one of the presidential candidate without his team to proclaim the election result. This is strange and heart broken, this is coup, election organise by the international community against Cote D’Ivoire do you know why because Gbagbo refuse to bow to Western Power, He want the true freedom, independence for African people to decide for them self . the continent is rich to eliminate him like they did of Patrice Lumumba and Kwame Kruma. This international complot lead by the French government against the people of Cote D’Ivoire followed sadly by OBAMA administration. Gbagbo just want a true independence without string attached he is fighting for the dignity of Africa and Black people, all African people have the God given right to choose their own leader not a puppy leader control by west serving industrial interest. All I am asking his to send your team in Cote d’Ivoire to investigate this matter further. FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM.
GOD BLESSES the People of Africa and People of Cote d’Ivoire.