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Fighting raged for a third consecutive day in Abidjan as Alassane Ouattara's forces tried to unseat Laurent Gbagbo. Last Modified: 06 Apr 2011 20:30 | ||||||||||
Laurent Gbagbo, the incumbent president of Cote d'ivoire, is still holding out in a bunker as fierce battles continue in Abidjan. "The negotiations which were carried out for hours yesterday between the entourage of Laurent Gbagbo and Ivorian authorities have failed because of Gbagbo's intransigence," Juppe told the French parliament.
It was not clear if Juppe was simply formally filling them in on earlier events, or if they have tried again to coax Gbagbo out of his bunker. Earlier in the day, forces loyal to Alassane Ouattara, the president-elect, stormed the residence where Gbagbo is hunkered down.
"Alassane Ouattara has given formal instructions that Gbagbo is to be kept alive because we want to bring him to justice," he said. "Gbagbo is still hiding and President Ouattara wants him seized and alive." South Africa, Togo and Angola are possible safe havens for Gbagbo should he negotiate an exit from his West African country, African Union (AU) sources said on Wednesday. Gbagbo, meanwhile, said it was not his "aim to die" fighting Ouattara's forces and called for direct talks with his rival.
Al Jazeera's Haru Mutasa, reporting from Bassam near Abidjan, said Wednesday's attack followed Gbagbo's refusal to "sign a document" in which he had to say he was ready to step down. "Gbagbo refused. That infuriated the Ouattara camp and then, it seems, they tried to go forward and try to capture him," she said. The UN and France, the former colonial master with more than 1,000 troops in Cote d'Ivoire, had said Gbagbo's departure was being negotiated following a fierce assault by Ouattara's forces. "We have asked the United Nations to guarantee his physical security and that of his family," Juppe had told France Info radio on Wednesday. He reiterated that he considered himself the winner of the election, although the AU and ECOWAS, the west African regional bloc, both endorsed Ouattara.
Al Jazeera's Jacky Rowland, reporting from Paris, said there was no word from the foreign ministry on the fate of Gbagbo. "There were talks involving two generals loyal to Gbagbo, but it is quite clear now that talking has past and it looks as though this crisis may indeed be resolved by military force after all." She said some Ivorians in French capital were elated at the news of Ggabo's ouster while others protested against France's intervention in Cote d'Ivoire's internal affairs.
The November election in the world's top cocoa producing nation was meant to end a 2002-2003 civil war, but Gbagbo's refusal to cede power plunged the country into a violent political standoff that has killed over 1,500 people. "I think he's playing for time,'' said a senior diplomat who has closely followed events and spoke on condition of anonymity because he had not been cleared to speak to the press. "His aim is always to buy himself just one more day." Choi Young-jin, the UN envoy in Cote d'Ivoire, said by telephone that Gbagbo's surrender was "imminent". "He accepted [the] principle of accepting the results of the election, so he doesn't have many cards in his hands," Choi told the Associated Press Television News. "The key element they are negotiating is where Mr Gbagbo would go." | ||||||||||
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Source: Al Jazeera and agencies | ||||||||||
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Thursday, 7 April 2011
Attack on Ivorian leader's bunker repelled
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