International efforts to mediate the crisis in Côte d’Ivoire have been buried by the government’s ”acts of war”, the West African state’s rebels said on Monday after pro-government militants attacked one of their positions in the restive west.
More than 100 militants waged a pre-dawn attack near Logouale, about 450km north-west of Abidjan, having crossed the confidence zone dividing the rebel north from the government south, deputy rebel spokesperson Antoine Beugre said.
The confidence zone is patrolled by about 10 000 United Nations and French peacekeepers
It was the first major ceasefire violation since government planes bombarded rebel positions for three days in November, killing a reported 85 civilians, according to a rebel toll.
”This attack is the umpteenth violation of the ceasefire by troops of [President] Laurent Gbagbo after the events in November,” rebel spokesperson Sidiki Konate said in a statement.
”With these acts of war, President Gbagbo has definitively buried all the efforts at mediation by the African Union and the international community,” Konate said, urging all civilians and rebel fighters to be on maximum alert.
An unknown group calling itself the Ivorian Movement for the Liberation of the West of Côte d’Ivoire (Miloci) claimed responsibility for the early-morning attack, which ended with about 70 militants in custody.
”We attacked the rebel positions to control the town,” said Pasteur Gammi, the self-proclaimed leader of Miloci, one of the dozens of pro-government militias operating with the tacit or overt support of the Gbagbo administration in the area on the border with Liberia.
”We think that the UN operation in Côte d’Ivoire and the French military here are not doing their jobs, so we decided to go and disarm the rebels ourselves so as to ease the suffering of our families, who live in the occupied zone.”
Humanitarian and diplomatic officials in the area said, however, that the militia is likely a front for the Front to Liberate the Great West movement, based in the government stronghold of Guiglo, or for the Ivorian national army itself.
Details emerging from the isolated zone of the world’s top cocoa producer were sketchy, as both UN peacekeepers and the rebels themselves said they had apprehended the militants, all of whom were carrying weapons such as AK-47 rifles.
There were no immediate reports of casualties, though a UN official said the attack means that the peacekeeping presence in the area will be increased and expanded to extend beyond the perimeter of the confidence zone, which has since September 2002 cut a 400km swathe across the centre of the country.
Once an anchor of stability and economic prosperity for a troubled region, Côte d’Ivoire has tumbled into chaos since a September 2002 coup sparked a low-level civil war.
Exhaustive French and West African mediation efforts have been virtually for naught, as a 2003 peace pact has yet to be fully implemented and the rebels still hold fast to their arms. — Sapa-AFP