W.Africa bloc recognises Ouattara as I.Coast leader

ABIDJAN/ABUJA, (Reuters) – West African regional bloc  ECOWAS recognised Alassane Ouattara as Ivory Coast’s president  -elect yesterday after disputed elections, urging incumbent  Laurent Gbagbo to accept defeat and step down.

But even before the 15-nation body issued its call, Gbagbo  defied international demands for him to yield in the power  struggle, naming a new cabinet even though Ouattara has already  announced a parallel government.

After an emergency summit attended by regional heads of  state in Nigeria, ECOWAS further increased pressure on Gbagbo by  suspending Ivory Coast’s involvement in the group, which leads  transport, finance and other projects.

Disagreement over the outcome of last month’s poll in the  world’s top cocoa grower has raised the risk of renewed violence  in a nation still divided in two by a 2002-3 war, prompting the  United Nations to begin pulling out some staff.

Gbagbo was sworn in as president last week and appointed  the new government, defying calls from the United Nations, the  United States, France and others for him to accept provisional  results of the Nov. 28 poll that made Ouattara the clear winner. “The heads of state and government recognised Mr Alassane  Dramane Ouattara as president-elect of Ivory Coast,” ECOWAS  leaders said in a communique issued after an emergency meeting  in the Nigerian capital Abuja.

“The summit called on Mr Laurent Gbagbo to abide by the  results of the second round of the presidential elections as  certified by UNOCI (the U.N. mission in Ivory Coast) and to  yield power without delay,” it said.

Gbagbo, who has kept control of the army and state  television, has dismissed calls on him to quit as meddling and  on Tuesday held a first cabinet meeting with his new government.