/ 5 December 2005

African leaders pick banker as new Côte d’Ivoire PM

African mediators on Sunday appointed central banker Charles Konan Banny as transitional prime minister to lead the war-ravaged Côte d’Ivoire into elections next year.

”The prime minister for the transition period that is scheduled to end in October, 2006 is Mr Charles Konan Banny,” said a statement signed by South African President Thabo Mbeki, Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and Niger President Mamadu Tandja.

They said Banny (63) would be given broad powers specified by the United Nations Security Council, including financial and human resources, control over security and defence forces and oversight of the electoral process.

The statement said Banny, who is governor of the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO), would not be eligible to run in the election to replace President Laurent Gbagbo.

The head of the rebel New Forces, who have held the northern part of the country since a civil war in 2002, welcomed the appointment.

”We congratulate him and wish him a lot of courage,” said Alphone Djedje Mady.

”The first duty of every Ivorian worthy of the name is to help him succeed in his mission in the interest of the country and peace.”

The country has teetered on the brink of fresh violence because of the difficulty in finding a leader acceptable both to the government and the rebels.

The UN Security Council on October 21 agreed to allow Gbagbo to remain an extra 12 months in office after attempts to disarm political factions stalled, leading to the cancellation of the October 30 presidential election. But the Council stipulated he

hand over powers to an independent prime minister.

Obasanjo said the nomination was ”a step toward radical change for a new Ivory Coast”.

”This is not a victory for a specific person,” he told reporters.

”It is the victory of all Ivorians, whether on the side of the government or of the rebellion.”

Flanked by Gbagbo, Obasanjo said, ”today is a day on which destruction will be replaced by construction, and conflict by renconciliation. We are at a stage when bitterness will be replaced by love”.

The UN-appointed mediators arrived in Côte d’Ivoire earlier in the day from a Franco-African summit in Mali which demanded progress in the Côte d’Ivoire’s festering leadership dispute.

Despite more than a month of AU-brokered negotiations, the divided West African country’s political groups had failed to agree on a transitional prime minister until Sunday’s breakthrough.

The three mediators said that Banny would have all the powers the Council specified in its October 21 resolution, including complete control over his Cabinet, allowing him to take over portfolios of ministers who boycott government sessions, and authority over all security, defence, electoral and financial matters.

The resolution also gives the prime minister responsibility for implementing the programme of disarming and integrating militias.

Banny will replace Seydou Diarra, who has been prime minister since the January, 2003 peace agreement signed at Marcoussis, near Paris and never put into effect.

A former French colony and the world’s leading cocoa producer, Côte d’Ivoire has been divided since the fighting broke out in 2002, pitting Gbagbo’s government against rebels who control the mostly Muslim north of the country. – Sapa-AFP