The West African regional bloc Ecowas recognised Alassane Ouattara as Côte d’Ivoire president-elect on Tuesday after a disputed ballot and urged incumbent Laurent Gbagbo to accept defeat.
Gbagbo earlier defied international demands for him to yield and he named a new cabinet, two days after Ouattara had announced his parallel government from a lagoon-side hotel guarded by UN peacekeepers.
After an emergency summit attended by regional heads of state in Nigeria, the 15-nation Ecowas further increased pressure on Gbagbo by suspending Côte d’Ivoire’s involvement in the group.
Ecowas’ acting president, Nigerian leader Goodluck Jonathon, warned against efforts to cut a deal, as in Zimbabwe or Kenya.
“We’ve seen that these governments of national unity … it doesn’t really work…Elections have been declared, somebody has won, so he has to hand over,” he said.
Mbeki appeals for peace
This after former South African leader Thabo Mbeki failed on Monday to settle the election row but appealed to both sides for a peaceful solution.
Mbeki had hoped to defuse a power struggle enveloping the country since an election which the electoral commission and international observers say Ouattara won — a decision reversed by the Constitutional Council, backed by the armed forces chief.
Gbagbo refused to concede defeat after the election commission said the November 28 poll, meant to reunite the region’s former economic powerhouse after a 2002-03 civil war, had been won by Ouattara with 54,1 percent of the vote.
Analysts warned the dispute could now pit the army against pro-Ouattara rebels, who said they would defend themselves against any attack, or even divide the army itself.
“The African Union is very keen that peace can be sustained and every effort should be made to ensure this transition to democracy succeeds,” Mbeki told journalists at Gbagbo’s house before leaving, adding he would file a report to the union.
“Cote D’Ivoire needs peace and needs democracy … We indeed hope that the leadership of this country will do all that it can to ensure peace is maintained.”
Security concerns
The dispute over the outcome of last month’s poll in the world’s top cocoa-growing country has raised the risk of renewed violence in a nation still divided after a 2002-2003 war, prompting the United Nations to begin pulling out some staff.
Gbagbo was sworn in as president last week and appointed the new government in defiance of calls from the United Nations, the United States, France and others for him to accept provisional results of the November 28 poll that made Ouattara the clear winner.
International backing for Ouattara is based on copies of result sheets collected by the United Nations across the country.
“The heads of state and government recognised Mr Alassane Dramane Ouattara as president-elect of Côte d’Ivoire,” Ecowas leaders said after the meeting in Nigeria’s capital Abuja.
At the United Nations, diplomats said Russia had blocked a UN Security Council statement that would recognise Ouattara as the election winner
After five-and-a-half hours of closed-door discussions, the council adjourned for the day with Russian envoys saying they needed further instructions from Moscow, the diplomats said.
Resignation calls
Gbagbo, who has kept control of the army and state television, has dismissed calls on him to quit as meddling and on Tuesday held a first cabinet meeting.
The line-up was missing former finance minister Charles Koffi Diby, who handled talks with the IMF and World Bank on $3-billion of debt relief and has a strong international reputation.
Speculation grew that he had changed sides after former IMF official Ouattara named him in his government. Diby did not turn up for Ouattara’s parallel cabinet meeting on Monday and has not spoken about his intentions.
Clashes with security forces and between rival supporters have left at least 28 dead and 280 wounded since November 26, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Mindful of the risk of bloodshed, Ouattara spokesperson Patrick Achi said he would keep supporters off the streets: “We have not chosen the approach of taking the streets or starting violence.”
Cocoa futures jumped to four-month highs on concern about supply bottlenecks, with the second-month contract up over 1.5 percent at $3,140 per tonne during Tuesday trade.
The yield on Côte d’Ivoire’s $2,3-billion Eurobond, a bellwether of investors’ mood, has risen to above 12% from below 10% before the vote. Emerging markets fund Exotix downgraded it to “sell” from “hold”.
Business catastrophe?
Business leaders warned of a catastrophe for firms unless political leaders quickly found a solution to the row.
“A number of businesses will not be able to pay taxes while others risk going bust,” the CGECI business federation said.
The United Nations, which has about 10 000 peacekeepers in the country, said it was withdrawing around 600 non-military staff to Gambia and Senegal, citing growing tensions.
Despite the risk that the row could re-ignite the conflict between north and south, Ivorians pushed on with life.
Once the showpiece of West Africa, Côte d’Ivoire’s leafy, tropical main city of Abidjan was calm on Tuesday, its wide boulevards humming with traffic and impatient hooting as normal.
“We’ve been in crisis many years, so it’s nothing new,” said lawyer Herman Dirabou, as he queued to pay his phone bill next to a women frying yams on a sandy pavement.
“Maybe with two presidents we’ll get twice as much done.”
The Constitutional Council, headed by a staunch Gbagbo ally, overruled the electoral commission, cancelling hundreds of thousands of votes in Ouattara strongholds, alleging fraud.
But the United Nations has said that even if the allegations were true, Ouattara should still have won. — Reuters