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Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Ouattara fighters seize Gbagbo-controlled towns


Ouattara fighters seize Gbagbo-controlled towns
Fighters backing Ivory Coast’s internationally recognised president, Alassane Ouattara, say they seized a sixth town from Gbagbo forces Tuesday, and are now heading for a target 200 kilometres north-east of Abidjan, the country’s commercial capital.
By News Wires (text)

AFP – Fighters backing the Ivory Coast's internationally recognised president Alassane Ouattara seized Tuesday a sixth town in a new push into areas controlled by his rival, Laurent Gbagbo.
The Republican Forces army captured the eastern town of Bondoukau and were parading through the streets, residents said.
"The town has fallen, I am looking for a way to leave Bondoukau," one resident said.
"There was fighting this morning (Tuesday), they are parading about the town shooting into the air. A rebel detachment is heading towards Agnibilekrou (further south)," another told AFP by phone.
Bondoukau is the sixth town seized by the fighters since mid-February in an escalation of a conflict rooted in November 28 elections which the UN-backed voting authority says Ouattara won, a result rejected by Gbagbo.
The pro-Ouattara Republican Forces army has occupied the north of the country since a failed 2002 coup and on Monday launched its biggest offensive since the poll into Gbagbo-controlled areas in the south.
Moving south of the traditional ceasefire line, they attacked Duekoue in the west, Daloa in the centre-west and Bondoukau in the east.
From their stronghold of Bouake in the centre of the country, Repulican Forces spokesman Seydou Ouattara said his men "control Dalao, Bondoukau and Agnibilekrou."
He said they were now moving towards Abengourou, 200 kilometres (120 miles) north-east of the economic capital Abidjan.
This could not be immediately confirmed by an independent source.
Syndicate contentEXCLUSIVE REPORTS FROM ABIDJAN
After a day of fierce fighting in Duekoue Monday, residents reported battles had abated but it remained uncertain who controlled the town, a strategic gate into the country's cocoa producing belt.
In Daloa the situation was still confused, with differing reports on who controlled the town.
The Ivory Coast's deep political crisis has been accompanied by violence and bloodshed in the four months since the election, which was meant to re-unite the split country.
The international community has raised fears the stand-off, a result of Gbagbo's refusal to cede power, is pushing the country into full-blown civil war.

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