/ 24 January 2011

Nigeria urges UN to authorise force in Côte d’Ivoire

Nigeria Urges Un To Authorise Force In Côte D'ivoire

Nigeria’s foreign minister on Monday called on the United Nations Security Council to authorise force in Côte d’Ivoire as West African nations seek to further pressure strongman Laurent Gbagbo to quit power.

Odein Ajumogobia, in an editorial published in Nigerian newspapers, said the crisis “single handedly precipitated by Mr Laurent Gbagbo … will inevitably lead to anarchy and chaos, or worse, a full-blown civil war” if not resolved.

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan is the current chairperson of West African bloc Ecowas, which has threatened to use force if Gbagbo does not step down in favour of his internationally recognised rival Alassane Ouattara.

“… The Economic Community of West African States [Ecowas] requires unequivocal international support through an appropriate United Nations Security Council resolution to sanction the use of force,” Ajumogobia wrote.

“This is the only way to legitimise the use of external force to effectively contain the increasingly volatile internal situation and ensure an enduring peace in Cote d’Ivoire and the West African sub-region.”

‘Legitimate force’
He said the use of force did not have to mean an invasion.

“The use of ‘legitimate force’ is however not exclusively about military warfare in the conventional sense and therefore does not necessarily connote an ‘invasion’ by troops,” Ajumogobia wrote.

“Legitimate force can include, for example, a naval blockade to enforce sanctions which might be imposed against Gbagbo.”

Asked whether he was suggesting the UN change the mandate of its peacekeeping mission in Côte d’Ivoire to allow it to participate in the removal of Gbagbo, Ajumogobia said an Ecowas military deployment should have the United Nations’ stamp of approval.

“My argument simply put is that the use of force by Ecowas in Côte d’Ivoire must be under the aegis of the United Nations, and that without an appropriate UN Security Council resolution to sanction such use of force, Ecowas use of force in Côte d’Ivoire would not be legitimate,” he told Agence France-Presse.

Gbagbo has defied global calls for him to quit power in favour of Ouattara, the internationally recognised winner of November elections.

On Saturday, West African presidents tightened the screws on Gbagbo, ridding him of an ally at the top of the regional central bank who had safeguarded his access to funds.

World powers and African states have been pressing Gbagbo to cede power after a November presidential election that United Nations-certified results showed he lost to rival Alassane Ouattara, with the regional bank last month announcing it would no longer accept Gbagbo’s signature.

However, the bank’s governor, seen as an ally of Gbagbo’s, failed to impose the decision by the bank’s ministers and he was removed from his post.

Ouattara orders cocoa exports halt
Meanwhile, Côte d’Ivoire’s internationally recognised leader Ouattara on Monday ordered a one-month halt to exports of cocoa and coffee, a statement said.

The government of the world’s top cocoa producer “informs economic operators of the immediate stoppage of all exports of coffee and cocoa”, starting on Monday until February 23, the statement from his office said.

Producers and exporters who violate the ban will be considered to be “financing the illegitimate regime” of Gbagbo, the statement added. — Sapa-AFP