UN probes Zimbabwe arms sent to Ivory Coast

UNITED NATIONS, (Reuters) – The United Nations is  investigating suspected arms transfers from Zimbabwe to Ivory  Coast’s incumbent leader Laurent Gbagbo in violation of U.N.  sanctions, according to a report obtained by Reuters. The report emerged after a week of gun battles between  forces loyal to Gbagbo and his rival Alassane Ouattara, almost  universally recognized as winner of a Nov. 28 poll, that risk  pushing the top cocoa grower back to full-blown civil war.

iplomats on the U.N. Security Council said the possible  transfer of weapons to Gbagbo was a serious matter. They said  his forces could use them against U.N. peacekeepers — UNOCI,  who recognize Ouattara as Ivory Coast’s president — or Ivorian  civilians who support Ouattara.

UNOCI’s confidential “Embargo monitoring report January  2011,” obtained by Reuters on Thursday, said the mission was  gathering more information on “the arrival of light weapons  cargoes from Zimbabwe.” U.N. officials told Reuters arms from  Zimbabwe would have been intended for Gbagbo and not Ouattara.

In January, Gbagbo sent a special envoy to Harare to meet  with and enlist the support of Zimbabwe’s President Robert  Mugabe, who like Gbagbo has been accused by his opponents of  election fraud and is under U.S. and European Union sanctions.