ABIDJAN, (Reuters) – Youth supporters of Ivory Coast’s incumbent Laurent Gbagbo rampaged through the business district of Abidjan yesterday, pillaging shops owned by foreigners.
The violence followed a call on Friday by Ble Goude, the head of Gbagbo’s youth wing, to resist an insurgency seeking to depose Gbabgo and install rival Alassane Ouattara, winner of a Nov. 28 poll according to U.N.-certified results.
Security in the world’s top cocoa grower is deteriorating, with gunbattles erupting for most of last week and hostilities resuming across a north-south ceasefire line that had been largely quiet since a 2002-3 war ended in stalemate.
Gbagbo’s Young Patriots have long been notorious for xenophobic violence, including attacks against the country’s French community in 2004, on its large Burkinabe and Malian communities and on northern Ivorians with cultural ties to them.
United Nations staff have also been attacked and robbed by pro-Gbagbo gangs this week after repeated broadcasts on state television accusing them of backing pro-Ouattara rebels. Gbagbo is furious with the mission for recognising Ouattara’s win.
U.N. investigators are trying to confirm whether Gbagbo breached an arms embargo by importing helicopters from Belarus. They had to abandon their search in the capital Yamoussoukro after his forces fired at them on the weekend.
A source at U.N. headquarters said information on the helicopter deal came from the intelligence services of one of the five permanent Security Council member states.
He said two helicopter gunships the U.N. mission urgently needed had arrived, which he called a “game changer” that would make it harder for Gbagbo’s forces to attack U.N. patrols.
ANTI-FOREIGNER
SENTIMENT
November’s election was meant to heal divisions sown by a 2002-3 civil war that left the country divided into a rebel-run north and government-run south, but the dispute has worsened divisions and killed well over 300 people since November.
The U.N. says the number of Ivorian refugees in Liberia had reached 68,000, with another 40,000 internally displaced.
Anti-foreigner sentiment is at the core of the troubles that have dogged Ivory Coast for years and has worsened as most nations recognise Ouattara’s win. Ouattara was twice barred from running in past polls because his father is from Burkina Faso. “I don’t understand what happened. The youths arrived … and starting destroying the things in my shop. They looted everything and now I have nothing left,” Senegalese shopkeeper Ismael Bah told a Reuters reporter.
“What did I do? I’m not involved in politics,” he added.
Mobile phone retailer Mamadou Barro, also from Senegal, fell victim to a similar attack.
“Everything I owned was invested in this business. Now it’s gone,” he said.