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IN THE NEWS - Ivory Coast Protests
This is Steve Ember with In the News, in VOA
Special English.
The government of France says it is closely following the violence in
its former colony of Ivory Coast. Protesters have demonstrated for several
days in Abidjan, the business capital of the West African country. They
are protesting the French military presence in Ivory Coast. Riot police
fired tear gas as they fought with young demonstrators near the main
French military base in Abidjan. On Tuesday the government banned demonstrations,
but the protests continued.
A youth leader, Charles Ble Goude, organized the demonstrations. He
is the leader of a pro-government group called the Young Patriots. Mister
Goude also led anti-French riots in Abidjan earlier this year.
French peacekeepers in Ivory Coast enforce a cease-fire line that separates
rebel forces and government troops. Without them, government troops
in the south could try to recapture territory controlled by the rebels
in the north.
Some protesters threatened to kill French citizens if the French troops
do not leave. France said its troops will remain. About sixteen-thousand
French civilians live in Ivory Coast.
For months, government and rebel forces have accused French troops of
supporting the other side.
France has about four-thousand peacekeeping troops in Ivory Coast. They
are stationed along a six-hundred-fifty kilometer cease-fire line. They
work with about one-thousand West African peacekeepers to help enforce
a French-led peace agreement. The government and the rebels signed the
agreement in January in an effort to end a civil war.
The war began after the rebels tried to overthrow President Laurent
Gbagbo in September of two-thousand-two. The war officially ended in
July. But tensions over the peace agreement have continued. The agreement
calls for both sides to disarm. It also calls for President Gbagbo to
share power until a new election in two-thousand-five.
But the rebels have refused to surrender their weapons. They accused
President Gbagbo of failing to carry out the peace agreement fully.
They withdrew from the coalition government in September of this year.
Late this week, President Gbagbo announced that rebels in the north
had agreed to begin surrendering their weapons on December fifteenth.
He spoke after meeting with army officials and rebel delegates in the
capital, Yamoussoukro. But on Friday, spokesmen for the rebel New Forces
said there was no such agreement, only a proposal. The rebels said they
will not begin to disarm until disputes about the coalition government
are settled.
Ivory Coast is the world largest producer of cocoa. For years, the country
was considered the strongest and wealthiest in West Africa. In nineteen-ninety-nine,
the military overthrew President Henri Konan Bedie. Since then, ethnic,
political and religious tensions have increased.
In the News, in VOA Special English, was written by Cynthia Kirk. This
is Steve Ember.
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